Newspaper Page Text
Li J
*r a
SOCIAL
-
OCTOBER BIRTHDAY
| What gifts for your birthday?
A song's clear melody,
The season’s own perfume
And color’s fantasy.
* To you I bring you all three,
And lay them at your feet—
* Faint perfume, color bright,
it- And sing for angel meet.
Odor of autumn fields
B* A dream beneath the haze;
Odor of burning leaves—
Flavor of waning days.
For color, see my prize;
The sweet gum purple star
Mottled with burning red,
Like to the star of war.
For song, the mockingbird’s
He sings his sweetest lay
High on the autumn bough,
Bathed in the sun’s last ray.
Odor of burning leaves,
Color of burning star,
Of burning ecstacy
bird notes from afar.
These to an autumn child;
October’s blithesome boy
Quaffs dedfc) the wine of IKe,
Drains both its woe and joy.
® € -^-Julia Collier Harris in
&L’- i the N. Y. Palisadian.
PI
Mrs. Wheaton and Mrs. Thomas
Entertain at Bridge Party
A pretty compliment to two
visitors, a recent bride and a
bride-elect was the bridge lunch
eon at which Mrs. Lewis Thomas
and Mrs. Robin Wheaton enter
tained Friday morning at the
home of Msr. Wheaton on South
Eighth street. Sharing honors
were Mrs. Wheaton’s guest, Mrs.
J, V. Pierson, of Atlanta, Mrs.
Alfred Uhler, of Palo Alto, Cal.,
the guest of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Victor Brown, Mrs. Charles
funnels, a bride of October, and
Miss Virginia Crouch, a bride
elect.
The lovely new home of Mrs.
Wheaton, which is beautifully
adapted to entertaining, was dec
orated in quantities of flowers.
The game was played in the liv
ing room, where the flowers used
were crysanthemums in various
shades, and the dining
which was decorated in vases
baskets of asters, cosmos
daisy crysanthemums.
Mrs. Wheaton was wearing
den brown Canton crepe,
in lace. ,
Mrs. Thomas was gowned
brown Canton crepe, trimmed
fur.
Mrs. Gunnels was wearing
na duvetyn, trimmed in black
and gold lace. Her small
was of black velvet.
Mrs. Uhler wore
georgette, beaded.
Miss Crouch was wearing
charmeen, the collar lined
light blue* crepe de chine.
hat was of orchid, embroidered
silver.
Mrs. Pierson’s straight
was made of green bengaline.
Mrs. Uhler and Mrs.
were presented Coty’s
and Mrs. Gunnels and Miss
hand made handkerchiefs.
prize for top score, also a
made handkerchief, was won
Mrs. Evander Shapard, Jr.
At the conclusion of the
Mrs. Thomas and Mrs.
served a delicious hot
with tea at the small tables.
Invi to meet the
ere «... Haskell Bass, Mrs.
tM A. Buise, Mrs. W. G.
Mrs. J. P- Mason, Mrs.
lit; Pittman, Mrs. James Powell,
iff ■ *
m
SfisBR ! . iS>
i m 'W
' l 11 s *
. **> 1^1
ms ^/f m I 1 1 r IP ii W|. "C % : r V:
■ -*■" __ 1 'TSs! ,
III
. <% V'-Ss
^0 Ik
■
-_—
EVENTS
SOCIAL CALENDAR*
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25.
Mrs. A. p. Patterson and Miss
Patterson will give a bridge
luncheon for Miss Virginia
Crouch and Mrs. Charles Gunnels.
Weekly tea at Country Club.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 27.
Mrs. Robert Shapard will give
a bridge tea in compliment to
Mrs. A. C. Long, Jr., of Bogalou
sa, La.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28.
Mrs. Dozier Wynne will give
a party for Mrs. Charles Gunnels
and Miss Virginia Crouch.
Mrs. T. H. Wynne will enter
tain the members of her domino
club.
Mrs. Charles Phillips, Jr., will
compliment; Mrs. A. C. Long, Jr.,
with a bridge tea.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29.
Mrs. J. C. Owen will give a
domino luncheon in compliment to
her guest, Mrs. Victor Manget, of
Newnan.
Mrs. Charles Phillips will give
a bridge luncheon.
Mrs. Parks Walker will give a
bridge luncheon for Miss Crouch.
Mrs. Ober Tyus will compliment
Miss Crouch with a tea.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30.
Miss Rossie Belle Newton will
give a tea for Mrs. Victor Man
get, the guest of Mrs. J. C. Ow
en.
Mrs. William H. Beck and Mrs.
William H. Beck, Jr., will give
a bridge tea for Miss Virginia
Crouch. V
Miss Amelia Walker will give
an evening bridge party, honor
ing Miss Virginia Crouch and
Mr, James Freeman.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31
Mr. Edward C. Smith and Mrs.
Charles Wolcott will give a re
ception at the Country Club from
8 to 5 o’clock in h onor o f M iss
Virginia Crouch.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1.
Mrs. H. I. Lindsey and Miss
Jessie Pearl Rice will compliment
Miss Crouch with a bridge party.
Will Slaton, Mrs. Parks Walker,
Mrs. J .H. Walker.
Mrs. Clayton Brown, Mrs. Rich
ard Drake, Mrs. John Stevens
Manley, Mrs. Kincaid Thomas,
Mrs. James Flynt, Mrs. Bartlett
Searcy, Mrs. Robert Walker, Mrs.
Walter Graefe, Mrs. Erskine Seay,
of Norfolk, Va., guest of Mrs.
E. F. Carlisle.
Mrs. William H. Beck, Jr., Mrs.
Robert P. Shapard, Mrs. J. W.
McWilliams, Jr., Mfss Mary Leila
Patterson, Mrs. Sam Mangham,
of Atlanta, guest of her father,
B. R. Blakely, Mrs. H. I. Lindsey,
Jr.
Mrs. Davis Williams, Mrs. A. C.
Long, Jr., of Bogalousa, La., the
guest of Mrs. Fred L. Durkee,
Mrs. Evander Shapard, Jr., Mrs.
T. I. Hawkins, Mrs. W. T. Ben
nett, Mrs. William Saunders, Miss
Edith Tucker and Mrs. Guy New
man.
Miss Helen Harrold Honor
Guest At Buffet Super.
Mr. Robert Shapard, Jr., en
tertained at a buffet supper Fri
day evening in honor of Miss Hel
en Harroldi, of Macon, the attrac
tive guest of Mibs Mary Alice
Beck.
The decorations throughout the
dining room and the living room
were bowls, baskets and 'jardi
nieres of beautiful pink and yel
low dahlias, raised in the lovely
EARS ARE BEGINNING TO REAPPEAR
THROUGH VARIOUS STYLES OF BOBS
■MONK BUT hrWB B^AVET
AND DfMV* 3HOV
THEIR EARS ! ]
* If
«
'THE' I
SILK*
WlGy I ■1
& \ ■
• -
■
m \
ms
t J
.
h* -• wt-iSK
'
: •:>
a x fiiMM
* j
£ *
m x: ;
x :
VIA ;*
M ■ii
.
V
i *. : : :
■JpSL
% ■■■
yy. 'M
The WINDBLOWN ii
DIRECTOIRP s w.
COIFFURE"* I
■
0
i. y :: ;>
4^
TfcE :
Garc fy'yy'i
m
.*.,
- ;
: > vX; * ill
i; • -V mmm V (■■
■
' ■ ■: S3:;X; : 1 1 V. - GLORIA"
■
' i * V :<v SWANSON, hfrsclf,
m THE
’vi-. CHOOSES
Simple bqe>.
they say
That ears are coming in again.
Shocking but true.
They’re coming in slowly, for
none but the brave so far have
dared show their ears to the world.
Some of the new bobs are
dressed so that the ears show quite
plainly. Some other bobs show
but the back of the ear. And still
others, cut very short, show tlio
lobes of the ear.
— The boyish b a b. -or troc ga rconne
bob, shows the ears. The hair is,
drawn back from the forehead and
from the sides of the head. A sleek
and glossy coiffure, the plainest of
all, and the most severe. But very
attractive—if yon can do it!
And there’s the bob that’s parted
laths a dip ov<
garden of Mr. and Mrs. Shap
ard.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shapard
assisted their son in entertaining.
A delicious supper was served,
after which the young people en
joyed dancing.
Invited to meet the attractive
honor guest were Misses Mary
Alice Beck, Virginia Boyd, Kath
erine Rogers, Henrietta Brewer,
(Katherine Weaver, Mary Viri
ginia Wilson, Elizabeth Norman
and Sara Randall.
Messrs. Frank Pittman, Jr.,
Charles Phillips, III, Phinazee
Griffin, Bruce Montgomery, John
Newton Gammon, Banks Pursley,
Elmer Griffin, Jr., Ernest Car
lisle, Jr., George Carson, Fred
erick Wilson, Jr., and Preston
Bunn;
Delightful Domino Party
Event of Friday afternoon.
Mrs. A. P. Patterson and Miss
Mary Leila Patterson entertained
at a beautiful domino party Fri
day afternoon at their home on
West Taylor street.
The game was played in the
living room, music room and din
ing room, all of which were beau
tifully decorated in fall flowers.
Vases and baskets of pink cry
santhemums'were used in the liv
ing room.
Mrs. Patterson received her
I
RIFFIN DAILY NEWS
cheek—but draw away from the
ear, not only to display it, but to
show a handsome earring.
There are some, however, who
prefer completely to cover the
head, ears and all. with a wig made
entirely of colored silk. Pink or
green or gold, or lavender, or—
:-.ny color at all! These wigs are
usually drooi!?d with a part in the
middle, and two, knots at each side.
Then there’s the “windblown ■ i
coiffure, truly historic, and copied
from tbo directoire period, This
brushes the hair 'slrai^Kt' fdrWarS;
uiT arcund, from back to front. "
But there's one woman that has
tried them all—Gloria Swanson.
Besides having the reputation of
being the screen’s most wondrous
Iy gowned woman, Gloria Swanson
has the reputation of having
achieved the most amazing coif
fures. She changes the dressing
of her hair with every
guests wearing blue georgette. '
Miss Patterson was wearing a
black satin ensemble dress.
At the conclusion of the game,
Miss Patterson, assisted by Misses
Ida Holt' Touchstone and Martha
Anne Moore, served a delicious
salad course «nd coffee at the
small tables.
The guests included Mrs. J. H.
Newman, Mrs. W. M. Weldon,
Mrs. Frank M. Gaissert, Mrs. Hil
lary Wynne, Mrs. Robert Wheat
on, Mrs. Robert L. Williams, Mrs.
Ben Brown, Mrs. Bruce Montgom
ery.
Mrs. George Niles, Mrs. New
ton J. Baxter, Mrs. Loyd Baxter,
Mrs. Ernest F. Travis, Mrs. Frank
Smith, Mrs. William H. Beck,
Mrs. Milton J. Daniel, Mrs. Frier
Thompson, Mrs. Ober Tyus.
Mrs. Elmer Griffin, Mrs. Doug
las Hand, Mrs. Dozier Wynne, of
Atlanta, Mrs. Lewis Jordan, Mrs.
J. C. Owen, Miss Norma ^ones,
Mrs. John Stevens Manley, Mrs.
Pinkney Price, Miss Marian Gres
ham. *
Mrs. Richard M. Mitchell, Miss
Sara McDowell, Mrs. Forbes, Mrs.
Richard Crowder, Mrs. Ellis
Drewry, Mrs. Otis Crouch, Mrs.
O. N. Mathis, Mrs. Clayton Brown
and Mrs. Woods Hammond.
Tampico, Mexico, is to have its
first modern fire fighting equip
ment and water supply system.
every mood, and every picture.
First she is gamine with her halt
ruffed out, stiff and bushy. Then
she is the exquisite society woman,
with hair simply dressed, straight,
chic. In quiet good taste. Then she
is the demi-mondaine, with hair in
more striking, glossy, intricat t
coiffure, dressed in braids and
swirls and knots and curls; band
ed, studded with jewelled pins, or
finished with a Spanish comb.
Then again she is the demure wife
Of the poor man, with hair plainly
and neatly arranged in simple love
r One
do with her hair in her next pic
ture, “Wages of Virtue.”
And one wonders how she really
wears her hair at home, as Y, rself,
Gloria Swanson. At home, she
wean it just as you see it in the
photo above. Parted at the side,
shingled, with delicately curled
falling against her cheek.
WITH WOMEN
OF TODAY
Miss Loretta Delaney, of Ska
neatles, N. Y., entering Syracuse
at the age of 14, is probably
America’s youngest university co
ed.
Mrs. John S. Morris, qf Talla
dega county has the distinction of
being the first woman honoreed by
a state office in the Alabama farm
bureau. She is an ardent advo
cate of co-operative marketing.
Miss Beulah Henry, a young
woman of Raleigh, N. C., has been
granted patents on 47 inventions,
most of which are practical de
vices for homes and offices, such
as an electric fan guard, rubber
sponge in which a cake of soap
is carried, telephone memorandum
pads and the lake.
Mrs. Louise Kirwin Thiers, old
est member of the Daughters of
the American Revolution, cele
brated her 110th birthday at Mil
waukee on October 2. Her father,
Seth Capron, was a corporal un
der Washington.
Twenty two thousand buyers,
including many foreigners, attend
ed the Swedish Industrial Fair
*t Gotenborg last summer.
Sammy, actober $111924
MILKMAN IN SKY SOON
WILL„SERVE GEORGIANS
Jacksonville, Fla Oct. 25.— !
•»
With the purchase of 800 acres
of land near here today by Capt.
j
3. B. Lipsner, it was announced,
that a landing field would be con -1
structed and the transportation by |
airplane .of dairy products
throughout the state of Georgia
soon would begin.
It is his plan, Captain Lipsner
said, to purchase several planes
to be used to carry milk, butter,
cream and cheese to various
towns and cities.
GIRL, SUPPOSED SLAIN,
FOUND POSING AS BOY
New York, Oct. 25.-*-Julia Han
nigan, 15 yeaf old Brooklyn high
school girl, for whom the police
had been looking since she dis
appeared October 12, was found
today in a men’s lodging house
in Brooklyn attired in her broth
er's clothes. She had had her
hair clipped and had masqueraded
as a boy.
The police at first looked on the
theory that the girl had been
murdered, as the clothes she had
discarded on leaving home were
found buried in the cellar of the
house. — -*-r*—*
'
TEACHER’S QUEER WAY
Jimmie: I ain’t going to school
any more.
Father: Why?
Jimmie: Cause, I’ll never learn
to spell. The teacher keeps chang
ing the words every day.
LIKE A PICTURE
Dick said I was like a girl on
a magazine cover. it
“That’s because he only secs
you onee a month. •• «
WHO’S YOUR BANKER?
EVERY MAN, NO MATTER WHAT HIS
INCOME IS, SHOULD HAVE ONE.
ttS
Our Institution is fitted by Experience and
Modern Equipment to handle YOUR Bank
ing Business Satisfactorily.
Savings department where you can accumu
late money for future use.
Safety deposit boxes for guarding your
valuables.
MERCHANTS & PLANTERS BANK
THE BANK WHERE YOU FEEL AT HOME »>
&
0
"■* 1
I JUST LIKE NEW! !
That’s what you’ll say of the old suits we
DRY CLEAN. They surely have the ap
pearance of a shapely new suit. Every
speck of dirt, every unnecessary crease has
disappeared from each garment under our
scientific methods.
We know you’ll be pleased.
All work is under the personal supervision
of a Registered MASTER Dyer and Drv
Cleaner. '
Send us your Dry Cleaning today or call 267.
Griffin Laundry & Dry Cleaning Co.
“Master Dry Cleaners”
■
LY •
c fie ’
I 4
w
a a (PC:
BRIDE’S NECK BROKEN
ON WAY FROM CHURCH
Chorley, Eng., Oct. 25.—As Mr.
and Mrs. Edmund Talbot were
driving away from the churcn
after their , marriage, . another .. au
tffmobile crashed into them and
the bride’s neck was broken.
A REFLECTION
Walter*. Did I come from heav
en, mother? f
-Mother: Why, yes.
w^ter: Gee, what a dunce i
was for leaving.
Old Folks’ s
Ailments 5
4< I began taking Black
Draught over fifty years
ago and my experience
with it stretches over a
good long time,” says Mr.
Joe A. Blakemore, a Civil
fgg War veteran, now a promi
nent citizen of Floyd, Tex.
It It is the bedt laxative I
know of for old people,. .
A good many years ago. In
Virginia, I used to get bili
ous and I found that
Bedford's
BLACK-DRAUGHT
^ was the best and quickest gjj|
relief I could get Since I
came to Texas I have these
bilious attacks every now
and then—and I find a
J little Black-Draught soon §p
H| straightens me out After gjp
a few doses, in little or no
time I’m all right again. ft
Thedf ord’s Black
Draught acts on the stom
Ag ach, liver and bowels In gg|
S a gentle, natural way, as- — -
W slsting digestion and re
|gg lieving constipation.
EX-102
dl