Newspaper Page Text
GEORGIAN.
ter Frederick Hood While, the young
phew of the bride, was christened, s
nephew of the bride, waa rhrlMened.
• Mr*. Pickerel! le the fourth daughter
of Mr. and Mr*. N. It. Keeling, and
ha* made Atlanta her home for aeveral
year*. Mr. Plckerell la connected with
ho*t of friend*. After July 10
Mr. and Mr*. Plckerell will be at home
at No. 163 Whitehall itreet.
MONDAY, jri.T 1
A DISTINGUISHED VISITOR.
Within the next few day* Atlanta
will have a dlatlngulahed vlaltor In
Judge Charlton, of Savannah, who I*
well and prominently known here. The
purpoae of hi* vlalt to Atlanta wlfl be
to addreaa the leglalature, both senate
and house, In behalf of the Oglethorpe
monument fund. In which all patriot*
are Intereated. For over a year the
K trlotlc aocletle* of the state have
»n raising fund* for the monument,
been raising fund* tor the monument,
and Judge Charlton hope* to obtain an
appropriation from the legislature In
addition to money already donated by
tbe societies. It la a conspicuous and
deplorable fart that Georgia, aa a atae,
believed that Judge Charlton
prlatlon nnd that a handsome monu
ment to Oglethorpe will be ercted In
Savannah.
MALONE-QILMORE.
Mr. Augustus Malone and Miss
Maude Gilmore were married nt high
noon Thursday, July 6, at the Monti-
cello hotel, Montlcello, Ga., Rev. E. R.
Pendleton officiating.
Mr. and Mr*. Malone left for At
lanta and other points of Interest Im
mediately after the marriage cere
mony.
TO MISSES RAWSON AND HOOD,
Miss Claire Ridley ha* aa her guests
Miss Frances Hawaon, of Baltimore,
and Miss Genie Hood, of Cuthbert, two
charming young girls, Srinpt stay In
Atlanta will be the occasion of several
pretty entertainments to be given In
their honor. Mrs. R. II. Ridley will en
of the week at her beatitlful country
home, Clairemont.
MI8S WOOD'S PARISH WORK
Miss Katherine Wood has returned
to the city after an nbsencs of two
years, and In September will enter a
field of woman's work which. In At
lanta at leaat. Is entirely new. Miss
Wood spent a year at the New York
tlon for the training of deaconesses,
1 where she took the scholastic course.
'From this Institution Miss Wood went
Ito Macon and took a year's course In
^practical training at the Appleton
church home. She has been called to
Atlanta and will be connected with
All Saints pariah as a deaconess of
that church.
Miss Wood la the tint woman to take
up this line of work In Atlanta Her
parochial duties will consist of Sunday
school work, visiting among the poor,
and various sorts of guild work. Nearly
all the members of the class to which
Mis* Wood belonged at the New York
Training school have been sent to for
eign missionary Helds, and It will be
a great source of pleasure to Miss
Wood's Atlanta friends to know that
her duties will lie at home. She Is
eminently fitted by mental attainments,
sympathetic Instinct and elevated
Christian virtues for the consecrated
work she Is about to assume. She
will make her home with her slatel.
Mrs. Joseph Cundell.
TENNI8 PLAYERS.
Messrs. Norman Farrell and E. W.
Daley, who represented the Nashville
Tennis Club at the Atlanta Tennis
Tournament this week, are expected
horn* Sunday morning, after a delight
ful sojourn In that city. The tourna
ment. which was largely attended and
most successful, was for the champion
ship of the South, and It took place on
the East Lake courts of the Atlanta
Athletic Club. Both the Nashville
... , . 1 „ , (Copyright, 1806, by W. !L Ilearst.l
Picture* of Mias Elsie Marlon .Farrell, former taneee of l»«vld lluyler (lain**, and Oeorgo A. Goss, (be former Yale foot
ball player, ber engagement to hliu having Just l-ecu announced.
ooooooooooooooooooo
All communications Intended
for the society department of
the Saturday issue of The Geor
gian must reach the office be
fore 11 o'clock Saturday morn
ing In order to Insure publica
tion.
0000000000000000000
players made excellent records, and,
their team lasted to the seml-
Hnals, winning two matches In fine
style Thursday. In the singles Mr.
Daley, who plays a splendid game, was
Anally defeated by Mr. Little, the Ken
tucky champion, whose hoiha Is In
Ohio, not going out until the latter
part of the tournament, being left till
then with the champions, Rodgers,
Hunt and Little.
Nashville society will be especially
Interested In the winning nt the wo
man's tennis championship by Miss
Kathleen Brown, now of Atlanta, form
erly of Nashville. During the resi
dence of Miss Brown's fnmlly here,
which continued several years, though
still a school girl, she was the cham
pion woman golfer at the Nashville
Golf and Country Club, winning the
handsome silver loving cup which was
the ladles' championship trophy. The
ly of Mr. Frederick W. Brown re
ed from here to Washington two
years ago, and recently went to Atlan
ta to live, where they occupy "Suther
land,” the home place of the late Gen
eral John B. Gordon, near Atlanta.—
Nashville Banner.
Mountain. Tenn.; Alice McGill, Deck-
ard, Tenn.; Blanche Allison, Pauline
Hancock and Catherine Robinson,
Chattanooga, Tenn.; Hnttle Hunter,
Johnson City, Tenn.; Catherine Dlcton,
South Pittsburg, Ky.: Elisabeth Price
Miss Florence Gunter headed the
popularity list and was given 1,000,8*0
cotes, or less.
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
The Foreign Missionary Society of
Payne Memorial church will meet
Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock, at the
church.
MRS. E. T. BEACHAM, Secretary.
AMERICAN WOMAN AS ALFRED
HARMSWORTH 8EE8 HER
Alfred Harmsworth (Lord North-
clllfe), one of the most unique figures
In present day Journalism, arrived a
few days ago In New York from Lon
don.
As Is well known, Harmsworth has
mads a magnificent aucceaa with hla
newspaper venturea In conservative
England.
11c Is the owner and editor of The
Ismdon Dally Mall, one of the moat
Influential newspapers In England. His
London house In Berkeley Square Is
the center of n very brilliant coterlo of
distinguished people, of w hich his wife,
now Lady Northclllfe, Is the leading
figure. She I* looked upon ns one of
the most beautiful women In London,
and her wit and brilliant repartee are
among her unusual charms
At twenty Harmsworth was a. poor
and struggling Journalist; at thirty, a
millionaire and before he was forty he
It, and very apropos of the methods
your men pursue. The Englishman
never rushes In anything, particularly
not In matters that affect his heart. A
woman la flattered by the time he takes
In hla love making.
. "American men may make fairly good
lovera before marriage; they may
shower their fiancees with American
beauties; they may stuff sweets down
their pretty throats; they may provide
... —. ‘ it I*
all aorta of entertainment, but
palpably lavished upon the girl that
sho becomes surfeited with the purely
material demonstrations of the man'
affection.
•'He forgets to tell her that he loves
her; In his business like way, he re
calls the day when he honored her with
the avowal of hla affection and looks
with prtdo upon the four-karat soli
taire, or the band or brilliants which
like that famous ‘Ad;
thinks ‘nuf ced.'
But with ua It Is different. A man
Is more devoted after he la married
than before, and while he doesn't buy
the bunch of vlolela or the
umiTucDN mm n im mcuu vault w “* »> ni,e 11 baronet, and Is known ■»
SOUTHERN GIRLS IN NEW YORK. Alfrwl, Lord Northcllffe. In tho llrlt-
Thera are Juat seventeen pretty
Southern girls In ons party now enjoy
ing the excitement of a first visit to
New York city. They hall from Geor
gia, Alabama, Tennessee and Ken
tucky, and are making their headquar
ters at the Hotel Flanders. They went
to New York In a special car from
Chattanooga, carrying a chaperon and
trunks galore.
For three months The Chattanooga
Dally News has been conducting u
contest for “the most popular young
lady,” and tho sweet seventeen now In
New York are a result. So Is Hudt-
burg, the circulation mnnuger of The
News, who earned a vacation by In
creasing the circulation by many thou
sands.
The names of the visiting girls are;
Misses Florence Gunter, Bridgeport,
Ala.: Alva Hall, Attallo, Ala.; Demle
Dennis, Huntsville, • Ala.; Jessie Hen
derson, Dalton, Ga.; Bltmche McFar
land, Dalton, Ga; Mary Fricks, Boss-
vllle, Ga.: Florence Copeland, Toddy,
Tenn.; Floule Blackburn, Cleveland,
Tenn.; Margaret Erwin, l-ookout
'PHONE US'
BROWN & ALLEN
Reliable Druggists,
24 WHITEHALL STREET.
We Send for Prescriptions and Deliver Free
Inh peerage. He was created a baronet
In 1904. This famoui* Engll«h editor
haa expressed some very peculiar
views regarding the matrimonial pref
erences of American w men, views that
are being combatted very vigorously In
the columns of the New York dallies.
Among other things Harmsworth said
a few’ day a ago:
“The most Interesting thing about
America la her women—at least that Is
whnt Englishmen think, and we ought
to know, for we have In London the
very flower of Amerlcun womanhood-
women of your country who have mar
ried our men. nnd who never come over
to this aide unless It mny be to make
'mamma' a brief visit or to see how the
mates have grown.
"The American girls like our men
better than she does the American; It's
because he knows better how to treat j
her.”
"I have studied the American girl, not
a lltle bit," continued the English edi
tor, "and It Is after much careful ob
servation that I have come to the con
clusion that our men make better hus
bands for the American girl than your
own men. Tbe American woman likes
him belter.
What the American woman—what
any woman likes—Is to be adored; to
made much of—to be worshipped,
In truth, and that Is where the English
man has advantage over the Ameri
can.* He adores, worships, lavishes his
affection on his wife.
"The American calls us a stupid lot;
• loves to tell the American girl those
stories, referring to the slow-going wits
of the average Englishman; the En
glishman may In* stupid—I don’t think
has heard hlg
fond, on some happy occasion In the
past—an occasion ssrhlch she may have
forgotten until reminded of It through
the forgetfulness and sentiment of her
husband."
Referring to the American woman In
letters, Lord Northcllffe accorded her
the highest praise. "Hour American
women are today the world's leading
novelists," he said. "Take Mrs. Whar
ton. who writes so charmingly, Mrs.
Cralgle, Mrs. Atherton, Baroness Von
Hutton—she^ too, Is an American girl—
and what wonderful work they have all
done for letters. The American woman
Is a wonderful production, for she can
do so many things so well. But In lit
erature she Is truly great."
JEFFERSON.
Miss Josle Teate returned to her
home In Atlanta last Friday, accom
panied by MIsa Ola Stockton, who will
spend several weeks as the guest of
Miss Teate.
Miss Llolse Lovelace, who attend
ed the Eve-Woolford marriage In At
lanta, returned home last Saturday.
Mrs. Jennie Bell haa been quite III
for several days.
Miss'Essie Lovelace Is at home from
Temple, Qa.
Misses MolUe Venable and Fay Eth
ridge are visiting In Winder.
Mrs. Paul B. Matthew’s continues
very 111.
Mrs. Sam Kelly Is Improving slowly.
Miss Lydia Nix Is the guest of Mrs.
J. C. Bennett.
An enjoyable affair was the picnic
last Wednesday afternoon on the pond,
a favorite resort, near town, only young
ladles being present. A delightful
luncheon was served, "picnic fashion,"
on the ground under the great oaks,
surrounded by many wild flowers.
Those prejent were: Misses Clifford
Daniel, Bertha and Alice Blackstock,
Jessie Storey, Sadie and Odell, Mamie
Pendergrass, Mamie Moore, Ruth and
Lurlte Mnhaffey, Carrie McOarity,
Grace Bell, Hattie Boggs, LoQrene
BrtH’k, Genevieve and Elolse Loveli
I OCfL
so—but If he Is, his stupidity Is of a < Ebble and Meta Appleby. Gussle and
sort that appeals to the American girl, Haldee Johnson, Mabel Hudson.
so much that she marries him.
"Let the Amerlcun man deny that! 1
can prove what I say by statistics—
actual figures.
"While the American Is busy making
money for his wife, the Englishman Is
busy making love to his. In the last
analysis a woman prefers a man w ho
DIAMONDS.
Atlanta Agents for
Candy
80c Pound
The practical trend of the day makes
makea love to on* who ran make mon- 1 value of the diamonds thetr tmpor-
ey. The Amerlcun woman I* Indeed tant feature In a purchase of stonee,
fortunate: she ha* the advantage of | and we urge the practical and auperior
having father* who make money, and i value of our collection,
she marries the Engllehmun w ho makea
love to her.
“Your men. I take It. are loo much In |
a hurry In their love affairs. They
•rush' a girl. That word Is strictly
American In the aense 1 hare juat uaed
DAVIS & FREEMAN,
Jewelers.
c
Personal Mention
J
, who
Mr. and Mr*. Horace A. Adam*,
were married In Atlanta last week,
reached the city yesterday after a '
to Lookout Mountain and to
Adams’ old home In Hunterllle. They
left at noon today for Denver, where
Mr. Adam* will attend the grand lodge
of the Elk*.—Birmingham Newi
Mias Shatteen Mitchell and her cou
aln, i M|as Bowers, of Columbus, who
are now In New York.' will leave sooi
for tha White Mountains, Naw Hamp
Mr*. William Bailey Lamar, of Flor
Ida, Is th* gueat of her parents. Mr.
and Mr*. R. B. Toy, at the Vernon
apartments. She has just returned from
a delightful season apent at Washing
ton. D. C.
Mr. and Mr*. John W. Pearce nn-
family left a few days ago for Wash
Ington. Philadelphia and New York,
i.n I will spend two months In the
White Mountains and at Atlantic City.
Mrs. Z. B. Rogers, of Elberton,
the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs,
W. Y. Zachry, at East Point Mrs.
Rogers will leave early next week for
a visit to Asheville, N. C.
Mrs. Dr. John O. Wilkins and har
sisters. Misses Marguerite and Cora D
Hester, leave Monday night for Hen
deraonvllle, N. (,'„ for the remainder
the summer.
Mrs. Henry S. Jackson and children,
Bula and Howell, return Tuesday from
Nashville, where they were the guests
of Mrs. Howell E. Jackson, at West
Meade.
Lieutenant W. H. Moncrlef haa re
turned from Tallulah, and will go on
Wednesday to Chlckamauga with- the
Seventeenth regiment.
Mr. Robert Ooodmnn, after visiting
hi* parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Charles M.
Goodman, In West End, returned
Kefr York Monday.
Mr. Joseph Taylor, of Savannah,
spending aeveral days. In Atlanta and
le being much feted by hie many
friends In the city.
Mrs: Joel ‘Chandler Harris left Sun
day at noon for Upton, Canada, to
visit her father, Captain Pierre La
Rose.
Mra. Bar ah Frances O'Keefe and Mrs.
J. O’Keefe Neleon will leave In a few
day* for the mountains of north G«or-
gla. ■'
»y of friends went up to Llttfla Springe
Sunday afternoon for a short stay.
MIsa Jean Vernoy, of Houston, Texas,
formerly of Atlanta, Is visiting Miss
Annie Jordan, No. 94 Crew street.
Mr. and Mra. J. N. Goddard
turned from their wedding trip Monday
and are at the Majestic.
Miss Adelaide Orr, of North Carolina,
le viewing her -cousin. Miss Susan
Stephens, on Cain street
Miss Addle Blephene, of Charlotte,
N. C., la spending some time In At
lanta with her parents.
MIsa Nellie Catlett and Mioses Haxel
and Helen Ware ‘are the guests of the
Mieses Catlett at Nashville.
Miss Marguerite Hines, of Washing
ton, Ga., will vlelt MIsa Bertha Ford
during the present week.
Mra. A. J. Williford and children have
returned to Raleigh, N. C., after a vlelt
to relative! In the city.
Mle* Roee Davis and Mlaa Eva Davla
have returned from the mountain* of
North Carolina.
Mr. and Mra. Hugh M. Wlllst and
sons, Hugh and Lawrence, have re
turned from a trip North.
Mrs. Livingston Mims has returned
from Boston, where she spent th*
month of June.
Mr, Frank Cundell has returned from
Sewanee, where he gave a song recital
at the university.
Mrs. H. M. Askew and children are
th* gueste of Mr. and Mrs. John Aakew
Newnan.
Mias Joale Stockdell apent Sunday at
Marietta, the guest of Mis* Florence
Jackson.
Mr. Nathaniel F. Jackson la spending
two weeks In south Georgia on a busi
ness trip. *
Mra. Robert M. Freeman haa returned
from a visit of two weeks at Jackson-
villa, Fla.
Mlaa Florence Hobbs la visiting in
Columbus, the guset of Mia* Mamie
Flournoy.
Mra. Allen Schoen and her aunt, Mlaa
Calhoun, ara at Toxaway for aeveral
weeks.
Mra. William Worth Martin le now
Keswick, Va, for a stay of several
weeks.
Mr. and Mra. E. L. Blahop will apend
the month of August at Long Meadows.
Mle* Margaret Underwood Is visit
ing friend* in Shenandoah Valley.
Dr. Pierce M. Butler la the gueet of
Mr. Frank Hawklna for a few days.
Mr. L. P. Hill, of Birmingham, la
th* gueet of relatives In Atlanta.
Mlaa Salll* Van Wyck Is visiting
Mrs. J. O. Cobb*, at Birmingham.
Messrs. Joe Arnold and Alton Irby,
West End, are at Tybee.
MIsa Kate Waldo I* spending a few
days with friends In Atlanta
Is visiting
MIsa Lola Williford to visiting rela-
‘HIGHEST QUALITY IN DIAMONDS.”
We want to talk to you about the quality of our diamonds
and our partial payment plan of selling. It will surely Interest
you. You can own and wear a beautiful diamond and never
miss the outlay. All marked In plain figures.
EUGENE V. HAYNES CO.
The Diamond Palace. 37 Whitehall Street.
Summer Experiences
of An Atlanta Woman
The following very charming letter
from Mrs. Wllllar.. forth Martin,
Atlanta, who to spending some time
Keswick,. Va., will be read with great
Interest by her many frlenda In the
city, and In other parts of Georgia.
Mra Martin writes;
for
the
many desirable places heli
at the last moment I decided I woul
for awhile cast my lot once more
amidst the hospitable people of the
Is to me—being the borne of my an
cestors and that of my husband. I am
most delightfully domiciled In the
home of my friend, Mra. Thurman, who
doubtless will be pleasantly remem
bered by many In Atlanta as Mle* Lis
ale Tate Gill, of Memphis, Tenn., who
*1X1 i atu Mill) tu wciuj/iiib, avia ii., w ssu
was the popular guest of Mrs. W. B.
Lowe, now Mrs, Gunter, a few years
ago.
Keswick to a noted 'old place orlgt
nally settled by the Page* and Rogers,
It to aald doubtless Dr. Page named
Keswick for the home of the
Southey, In Cumberland county,
land. Adjacent to Keswick are many
noted old estates The Hits of those
who have lived here, and nearby, to
long and honored one. Many names
are of such national celebrity that I
feel an account of those who bore
them and the homes which eo reflected
It when he eald, "the people of Albe
marie were the society of nature," as
like the beauties of nature around
them they partook of the beautiful in
character—
Search the land of living men;
Where wilt thou And their like agen. 1
It to here we And the old home
steads of Virginia's Illustrious sons
who have long since nassed Into the
unknown, but whose nomes are pre
served, and their memories cherished.
The noted home of Thomas Jefferson,
8 miles distant (distances, by the way,
to Virginians, seem of n'lmporte),
doubtless next to Mt. Vernon there lx
no place In the United States that has
been more written of or more visited
than Montlcello (Italian for little
mountain.) We were fortunate In be
Ing the guests at a reception a few
evenings since given at this grand old
place by Mr. and Mrs. Von Mayhoff,
slater of the present owner, Hon. Jef
ferson Levy, of New York, who, to all
appearances, Is still enjoying the
Measures of “single blessedness,” and
to to Mra. Von Mayhoff ne looks to
assist him In doing the honors of the
home. Mr. Levy haa shown hls line
Judgment In preserving, as near aa
possible, the house as It was originally,
only renovating It aa to the preserve
tlon of same.
The drive to this home Is over
smooth and easily graded rood which
winds gracefully around "Carter's
Mountain," bringing the traveler to the
"Notch," or flrat summit, almost before
he realise* It. Here stands a porter's
lodge with artlstlo double gates
through which vehicles enter upon tho
Montlcello domain .proper, and aa on*
begin* to ascend the "Little Mountain”
in which the mansion sits a mile
ive, an Immense bell that ta sus
pended above the gate Is rung to an
nounce the coming of visitors. Enter
ing from the eastern portico with Its
lofty Corinthian pillars and arched
door, over which to still seen-the old
English clock which marks the hours.
The visitor le here met and ushered
through large double glass doors Into
a spacious eeml-octagonml hall with
Its wide flreplace at one end, as to us
ually found In old English mansions.
on one side of It stands a fine
marble bust of the patriot himself, and
on the other, one of Washington, both
by the celebrated Italian artist, Car
racci. From this hall opens another
glass door leading Into th* drawing
or salon, being the largest and
_ omeat room In the house and sit
uated Immediately under the dome.
This room to also octagonal It* floor*
being laid In parquetry of octagonal
blocks of different colored wood, which
were cut by hie own colored workmen,
giving It a moat unique and pleasing
effect and which for skill challenges
the genlua of a more Intelligent race.
Th* belief that Mr. Jefferson Impcrted
from England moat of the brick used
to quite erroneous; all of these were
made upon the spot by hls own alavea
and tbe site of tbelr manufacture to
still pointed out.
General Tarleton came to Montlcel-
at the head of the English army to
pture Jefferson, who was warned b]
friend, and escaped through an un
derground passage which ends In an
opening part of the way down th*
tires In Americas.
Mr*. Emily McDougsll returned Mon
day from Athena.
I'-a Estelle Whelan, who haa been
l* out again.
Mr. Tom Perrin has returned from
Chattanooga.
GRESHAM ASHFORD
SHOE CO.
93 PEACHTREE ST.
BETHLEHEM.
Everett and Lucti* Harris visited
relatives at Hoschton last Friday.
John H. Bedenfleld made a business
Ip to OalnfesvIHe Wednesday.
Rev. M. K. Pattllo was called to At
lanta Tuesday on business.
Professor A. T. Harrison, principal
our high school here, made a burl-
mountain. This opening has been
marked by a rough stone arch. His
tory say* that Tarleton was *o angry
on finding that Jefferson had escaped
that he rode hls hone straight through
the house, and the Impression -of th*
horse’s hoofs were visible on the hand
some floor for many year*.
By order of congress a new monu
ment haa lately been erected upon th*
site of the old and battered shaft which
stood over hi* grave In the little bury
ing ground by the roadside to the left
as one foes toward the valley from
Jefferson 1 * home. The new monument
bears the Inscription from the old stone
which has been piously removed to the
University of the State
campu* of the
of Missouri at Columbia. He
quested that at hls death the follow.
[ere to buried Thomas Jefferson, au
thor of the Declaration of Independ
ence, of the Statute of Virginia for
Religious Freedom and Father of the
University, of Virginia.' Born April
3, 1743, O. 8. Died July 4, 1826."
Evidently he didn't place much stress
on having been president of these Uni-
ted States, for any who hold the pn.
Iltlcal strings could pull them In their
the thing he apparently val
favor, but
ued most Was that he had accomplish
ed what none other had or could here
after do.
"Pantops," one of Jefferson's
farms, formerly written "Pant-Op*,"
from two Greek words, meaning "all
seeing,” significant of the extended
view from Its summit, stands under the
shadow of Montlcello immediately op.
posits on the north aide of the river.
In the year 1877 alter the death of Cap
tain Anderson* Pantops passed Into the
hands of Rev. Edgar Woods, who had
been pastor of the Presbyterian
Church in Charlottesville, compelled hy
falling health to relinquish hla charge,
he removed to Pantope, and there open
ed a email school for boys, chiefly to
educate hls own sons. Such was the
upon urgent entreaties
and neighbors for Its continuance he
was compelled to greatly enlarge and
Improve the old mansion of forty year*
previous, which was, even then. In
sound preservation, though uneulted
to modern requirements. Failing
health, however, compelled him to give
up hls Increased labors, and In 1884
Pantops was again sold to Professor
John R. Sampson, who had for eight
years filled with distinction the chair
of ancient languages at Davidson Col
lege, N. C, Upon taking possession of
the school. Professor Sampson found It
necessary to again greatly enlarge It*
facilities to meet the rapidly Increased
patronage, and at once erected a large,
three-story building with all of it*
modern Improvements for lecture
rooms, study hall library, etc, a* well
aa other outside buildings, as dormi
tories, gymnasium, bathing room*, un
twiicn, B/iiiiiaaiuiiii uaiuiiig iiaiiiid, tin-
til now the classic summit of "Pan-
tops" to crowned with many stately
and Imposing buildings, which like a
“city set on a hill,” send* forth It*
light to all parts of the world, many of
Its graduates being In foreign land*,
while others are filling high and hon
ored positions In our own.
ored positions In our own.
"Edgehlir mansion, the home of the
Randolphs, next to Montlcello In his
toric celebrity, of It I could write much
of Interest, but space forbids. It will,
however, be long remembered and nl*n
dear, not only to the hearts of Vlr-
South who have spent there *«
7 all that to pure,
many happy days amid
reflned and elevating.
It to aald If there to any place hy
man's creation which approaches the
great secret of nature like the untouch
ed woods, or the ocean's roar which
calls forth our solemn admiration, that
place I* "Castle Hill." This name will
at once recall to the minds of mony
as the old home of Amelia Rives, new
"Princess Troubetskoy,” who stllh I am
told, spends a greater pert of her 11m*
there. To visitors to still pointed nut
the room where at the wlqdow fronting
the lawn, stands her little rocking chair
and the table upon which ehe wrnta
“The Quick or the Dead” and other*
of her productions. Mra. Rlvea, the
mother of Princess Troubetekoy, has ex
tended a'very cordial Invitation to my
hostess to bring her guest to visit th*
place, and that pleasure 1 have In an
ticipation for the week following.
I could write ad Infinitum of the In
numerable grand old historical honn-s
In and around Keswick, but I realize
I have already wrlten at too great a
length. I And, however, the good old
"Virginia” custom* are atlU perpetu
ated when
Gallant mirth waa wont to sport
awhile
And serene Old Age looked on with
approving smile.”
Mr*. R. S. Harris and family plcnlred
at Tanner bridge Wednesday.
IBUIICI UIIURC »» CUIICB-IOJ,
Mra. Pricket and son of Chattanooga,
Tenn., are visiting Dr. and Mrs. R- P-
Adam*.
Mr. and Mr*. Robert Autry, of Moun
tain, waa a guest of Mrs. Martha Hol
loway Sunday.
Misses Zella and Roale Matthew*
visited Gratis Sunday.
C. L. Sima made a business trip to
Winder Monday.
L F. Harris and E. S. Harris made a
business trip to Winder. .
Mr. and Mr*. E. 8. Harris vlalted
Carl Wednesday.
The Fourth of July waa the day art
for the Sunday school doe* of L. «■
Leslie to have their picnic. The crowd
comprised Messrs. L. W. Leslie. H. J-
Hendrix. Wesley Bell R. H. and John
Moore, Custer Rosa, Rastua Matthew*.
Coleman Treadwell Herman Horn*.
Henry Thompson and Misses Mar)
Hendrix Zella and Roale Matthew*.
Ads Tearwood, Ada Rosa, Raptlella--•
nle. Annie Bedlngfleld. Ruth Tread
well, Daisy Studavant. They all *•*
port a pleasant time. \
'. C. Bedlngfleld, tax receiver
Walton county, to In Atlanta on bus
iness this week.
Professor J. L. Moore to attending
e singing convention In Marietta this
week.
Editor Cariweld. of The Walton News,
as In our city Monday.
John F. Nowe to on the alck list.
BEAUTIFUL LINE OF
-NEW BRACELETS-
Jutt Received. Look at Them-
Charles W. Crankshaw,
Diamond Merchant nnd J***k'-
Century Building. Whitehall St
ALL HOMES MUST HAVE FINE PICTURES AND FRAMES. WE
STAND ALWAYS READY TO SUPPLY THEM.
COLE BOOK AND ART COMPANY,
69 WHITEHML STREET.
EVERYTHING NEW OR OLD IN THE BOOK WORLD.