Newspaper Page Text
R
SSLLTi
ed
HOTEL
N OTHDfQ to do but
look from your win
dow or from the Knicker
bocker run porch over the
waves to the horizon—va
ried pastime, sleep, loung
ing on the sand, chair
rides, walks in the salt air
That is REST assured! And
rest assured, the comforts
and food are nnforgetably
good at
American or
European Plan
KNICKERBOCKER
C. H. LAN DOW. manager
ail pirate baths with hot and cold sea water. Baih-
fasg from hotel. Convenient to all pieca,
theatres, and amusements
Atlantic city, n. j.
STEKCIII’S
AUGUST SALE
Friday, August 14, 1936
The Southern Israelite
Moonlight Picnics and Outings Attract Atlanta'
Smartness Prevails at Modern
Page Three
Version of Moonlight Picnics
"1 m putting all my hard-boiled eggs in
one basket” has become the theme song
of those Atlantians, who have, during the
summer months, gone back to the simple
pleasures that delighted less sophisticated
generations in the past—namely, the old-
fashioned moonlight picnic and outing.
And why not? Old melodramas like
“Murder in the Old Red Barn” have be
come vastly popular with moderns, and
only recently an ingenious hostess arrang
ed a square dance that was the talk of the
town for days.
Woodland dangers do not phase the na
ture-loving members of Atlanta’s social
contingent. They would rather face the
perils of ants, poison ivy, and even an im
probable grizzly bear than the problems.of
dancing to swing music on over-warm
nights or preserving an unruffled and
amiable nature at indoor bridge.
Smartness is the keynote of these out
ings. Cool, crisp organdy and impeccable
white linen make appealing pictures in the
moonlight, and the pleasant sounds com
ing from the portable bar vie with the
gurgling of the brook. Over the radio
comes the music of favorite orchestras,
punctuated by the splashing of gay, moon
light swimmers.
It -ITER MELON cutting ,
A recent outstanding affair in
the social calendar of the younger
contingent was a watermelon cut
ting given by Miss Violet Papou-
chado at Cooley’s lake. Guests as
sembled at the home of the hostess
prior to the outing.
Dancing and entertainment were
enjoyed by the guests, who includ
ed Miss Mildred Rothenberg, Esther
Almeleh, Betty Danneman, Edythe
Stein. Dot Kunsberg, Rae Edel-
stein, Clara Capouano, Bea Piha
and Pauline Saul.
Leonard Orenstein, B. Freedman,
Alee Goldstein, Lawrence Danne
man, Dave Tarratoot, Jackie
Amato, Sam Behor, Terry Morris,
Izzie Oxman, Leon Goldstein, Irv
ing Stone, Charles Gershon, Meyer
Goncher, Bernie Lewis, C. Lewis,
.Martin Sewor, and others.
Married In Nashville
s Social Set
DIXIE’S
leading
FUR SHOP
j: jChaj age's
19th Annual
Summer Fur Sale
HENRY SOBELSON, PROP.
F. I*. Boyt Screen and
Weather Strip Co.
VENETIAN BLINDS
SCREENS
WEATHER STRIPS
RADIATOR COVERS
EDGE-LITE BATH CABINETS
313 W. Peachtree, N. W.
JAckson 0492
—The Nashville Observer.
MR. AND MRS. SYDNEY MANAS
PERSONALS
Dr. H. J. Rosenberg and sons,
Herbert, Jr., and Leman Rosen
berg, have returned from a brief
visit to Greenwood, S. C.
* * *
Mrs. M. B. Jacobs has returned
from an extended trip through the
West and Canada.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Strauss, Sr.,
and their little granddaughter.
Margaret Strauss, have gone to
eral weeks.
Misses Pauline and Dorothy Cwi
will leave Monday for a stay of
several weeks at Miami Beach, Fla.
Jack Lissner, of Brunswick, Ga.,
spent several days in the city last
week.
* * *
Mrs. Max Epstein and daughter,
Mildred, have returned from a
Caribbean cruise. Their itinerary
included several cities in Colum
bia, South America, and points of
interest in Kingston, Jamaica;
Panama, Canal Zone, and the Re
public of Panama. Upon their re
turn to New York, Mrs. Epstein
and Miss Epstein spent several
days visiting relatives.
* * *
Mrs. Columbus Smith and Sidney
Smith will leave next Wednesday
by airplane for California, where
they will be the guests of Mrs.
Smith’s brother and sister, Mr. and
Mrs. D. H. March.
* * *
Abe Shapiro, of Orlando, Fla.,
was a recent visitor to the city.
* •* * *
Mrs. Bertha Hirshberg and Mrs.
Helen Grossman are enjoying a
stay at Miami Beach, Fla.
Mrs. Sam Sonnenberg, of Green
ville, S. C., left Monday to join a
party of friends in Virginia. The
party will stop over in Washington,
I). C., en route to New York, from
where they will sail to Nova Scotia.
* * *
Mr, and Mrs. Larry Altmayer
and son, Arthur, are motoring to
East Orange, N. J., where they will
be the guests of relatives. They
will return to the city early in
September.
* * *
Joseph Jacobs has returned from
Miami, Fla., where he visited his
father, Abraham Jacobs, and his
brother and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
William Clein.
* * *
Miss Isabel Erlich and Miss
Elena Greenfield left last Satur
day for a two-week tour of Mex
ico.
* * *
Mrs. Maurice Golsen and young
son, Charles, have returned from
a two-month tour of the East.
Their itinerary included Bell Har-
bor, L. I.; Verona, N. J., where
they were the guests of Mrs. Gol-
sen’s mother, Mrs. Emery Good
man; and Redding, Pa., where they
visited Dr. and Mrs. Daniel Berto-
let.
* * *
J. Wilensky spent several days
last week in Montgomery, Ala.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Reisman
and son are leaving Saturday for a
two-week trip to Havana, Cuba.
* * *
Mrs. Ed Guthman, Mrs. Milton
Klein and Miss Edna Klein are va
cationing in Atlantic City.
* * *
Miss Marjorie May is spending
several weeks at Miami Bench,
Florida.
* * *
Miss Lillie Rosenberg, of New
Orleans, is the guest of her cousin,
Mrs. Siegfried Guthman.
♦ * *
Mrs. Saul D. Powell has as her
guests her sister, Miss Hilda Glas-
ser, and Mrs. Sara Miller, of Balti
more, Md.
* * *
Mr,- and Mrs. Frank Forst are
the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel
Schoen at St. Simons.
* * *
Miss Daisy Jacobs is a visitor at
Oak Mountain near Columbus, Ga.
♦ * *
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Haas sailed
Tuesday for a trip to Europe.
* * *
Mrs. Walter W. Visanska has
returned from a visit to Columbus,
Georgia.
* * *
Mrs. Henry Gold and Henry
Gold, Jr., are spending two weeks
in Daytona, Fla.
* * *
Mrs. S. Hofflen has returned to
her home in Columbus, Ga.
+ * *
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Hess have
returned from a visit of several
weeks in Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Strasburger
have returned from Columbus, Ga.
* * * ’
M. B. Selzer and Harold Wein
berger are spending several days
at Myrtle Beach, S. C.
* * *
Mrs. Monroe Mayer, of Colum
bia, S. C., is visiting her sister,
Mrs. Ruby Benjamin.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Feibel-
man and daughter, June, are va
cationing in Savannah, Ga,, and
Jacksonville Beach, Fla.
at
Mrs. Alvin Ferst and family are
Folly Beach, S, C.
Friends of B. F. Joel will regret
to learn of his illness.
* j *
Miss Addie Elkin, of Selma, Ala.,
is the guest of her sister, Mrs.
Amelia Feibelman.
* * *
Miss Marion Freedman is visit
ing her aunt in Birmingham, Ala.
* * *
Friends of Sam Nussbaum will
be glad to learn that he has recov
ered from a recent illness.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Stern
berg and children, Ann and Jerry,
of Asheville, N. C., will spend two
weeks with Mrs. Sternberg’s par-
en w Dr Nu an ? M o r , 8 ’ S - A - Visanska.
Mrs. Charles Shapiro and daugh
ter- Sandra, of Detroit, Mich., are
visiting Mrs. Shapiro’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Sam Nussbaum.
* * *
Miss Sylvia Nussbaum has re
turned from a vacation in Detroit,
Mich. ’
* * *
Louis Long will return to the
city en Monday, after having spent
several weeks vacationing in Can
ada.
FAREW ELL PARTY
v A . far ®^ e, J P art y given by Miss
r i eeda b nedman on Tuesday, Aug
ust 11th, was another in the round
of social events honoring Miss
f t eeda Greenburg, visitor to the
city from Birmingham, Ala.
Among those who attended were
Misses Marion Freedman, Sylvia
Nussbaum, Jeannette Seigle, Rae
Ldelstein, Esther Krasner, Irene
VNeisman Annie Kash, Edith and
I a> Kaplan; Hyman Friedlan, Sid
ney Friedman, Meyer Rodes, Jack
b rank, and others.
1 he honoree, who has returned
to her home in Birmingham, was
the guest of her uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mrs, G. Friedman.
levinesugarman
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Levine an-
nounce the marriage of their
daughter, Margaret, to Harry
Sugarman, on August 2, in Colum
bus, Ga.
Following a wedding trip, the
couple will live in Atlanta.
HIRSH MAN AS
An impressive ceremony in
Nashville, Tenn., marked the mar-
i lage of Miss Ada Hirsh to Sydney
Manas, of Atlanta, son of Mr. and
Mrs. H. Manas, at the home of the
bride s father, M. Hirsh on Sunday,
August 2nd. Rabbi S. B. Yampol
officiated in the presence of the
immediate families and close
friends.
The bride was given in marriage
by her father, and the groom was
attended by his parents, who are
residents of Nashville.
A reception in honor of the
couple . followed the ceremony.
Later in the day, Mr. and Mrs.
Manas left for a wedding trip to
Lakemont, Ga., and will make their
home in Atlanta.
ROSENBERG-DORFAMAN
Mrs. Charles Rosenberg an
nounces the marriage of her daugh
ter, Jean, to Bill Dorfaman, the
ceremony having taken place Sun
day, August 2, at the homo of the
bride’s uncle and aunt, Mr. and
Mrs. Jake Faeman. Rabbi Tobias
Geffen officiated at the impressive
ceremony. f
The bride is the daughter of the
late Charles Rosenberg, who was a
well-known business man of At
lanta. Mr. Dorfaman, formerly of
Chicago, is a resident of Spartan
burg, S. C.
Following the ceremony, Mrs.
Rosenberg entertained in honor
(Continued on page 4)
Louis XV And
Other Periods
Are Now Being Featured In
Mrs. Alfred Revson
Consulting Decorator at Sterchi’s
Invites you to see these
fascinating suites and odd
pieces.
STERCHrS
116 Whitehall St.