Newspaper Page Text
MORNING, OCTOBER 29, 1912.
THE BANNER, TUESDAY
SOCIETY
THINGS OF INTEREST TO
WO M EN
Excellent Suits
WING COLLARS
STRONG WHERE OTHERS
ARE WEAK* . 3 for 25 cents
CALENDAR OF THE WEEK
As we are now showing for fall and win
ter wear are worthy of the consideration of the
man who cares. They are of the sort of
clothes that left a man above the level of the
evening dresser.
Tuesday.*
lire. J. A. Atkins* bridge party at the country club.
Wednesday.
Louis Mann, in “Elevating a Husband," Colonial 8:30 o’clock.
Mrs. M. W. Welch reception from8 to 12 for the U. D. C. delegatee.
Thurs day.
Fri day.
Cotillion at Dupree Hall.
Saturday.
Sewanee vs. Georgia Soiree at D upree Hall.
FINE FRENCH CHINA DINNER
WARE.
In open stock, make very desira
ble gifts for Weddings and Christ
mas. „
Haviland gold band and incrusted
China in eight different patterns
to chooBe from.
Monograms on china must be or.
dered three weeks in advance of
date wanted.
Our prices are low. We buy on
import at lowest cost and mark
the goods in plain figures at one
low price only. That accounts for
cause, in moral anc religious ques
tions, than is required to face the can
non’s mouth in battle
QUAINT WEDDING DAY CUSTOMS
(Answers, London.)
Superstition never clustered round
any episode of life more than that
of the wedding day, especially in old
en times.
Then it was customary for the bride
to present her future husband with a
bunch of rosemary, tied up with rib
bons on his first appearance on the
wedding morning. This was supposed
to insure his love and loyalty, and to
make her happy forever.
In Yorkshire the old superstition
still abounds that nothing more un
lucky could happen than for a newly
made bride to leave the church by a
different door from that by which she
entered.
Another quaint custom, for which
there is no known origin, is that prac
ticed in some of the midland and
northern counties. This is to ring a
merry peal of the church bells at the
first reading of the banns of an in
tending matrimonial couple. It is
called the ‘‘spur peal,” which in old
Anglo-Saxon means simply “ask.”
Of course,
For the reason we are making a request
that you call to see our new garments, with
the assurance that we have Something more
to show you than “just clothes.”
CALENDAR OF U. D. C. CONVENTION.
Tuesday, Oct. 29th, 3:30 P. M.
Meeting of the executive board at the Villa.
Tuesday, Oct 29th, 5 P. M.
Meeting of the Credentials Committee at Lucy Cobb Institute, Seney-
Stovall chapel.
Tuesday, Oct. 29th, 8 P. M.
Opening session.
Wednesday Oct. 30th, 9:30 A. M.
Business session.
Luncheon given by the Laura Rutherford chapter at 1:30 P. M.
Wednesday, Oct. 2:30 P. M.
Business session.
Wednesday, Oct. 30th, 5 P. M,
Automobile ride.
Reception at Winnie Davis Memorial Hall State Normal School, 5:30 to
7 P. M.
Wednesday, Oct. 30th, 8 P. M.
Reception by Mrs. M. W. Welch, president Laura Rutherford chapter,
Milledgo avenue.
Thursday, Oct. 31st, 9:30 A. M.
Business session.
Luncheon at 1:30 by Athens Woman’s Club.
Thursday, 2:30 P. M.
Business session.
Thursday, Oct. 31st, 5 P. M.
Reception by the D. A. R. at the home of Mrs. Frances Long Taylor
on Milledge avenue.
Thursday, Oct. 31st, 8 P. M.
Business session.
Address by the president—Mrs. Walter D. Lamar, “The Daughters of
the Confederacy, a Citiezn of the Republic.
Friday Nov. 1st, 9:30 A. M.
Business session.
You know our prices are always season
able; everybody knows that—and so will not
quote you a string of meaningless figures, but
will ask you to call and allow us to “show
you.”
Dentist
312 Southern Mutual Building.
Hours 10 A. M. to 5 P. M.
Bey Your
KODAK SUPPLIES
From
Frederick J. Bal
Phone 994-J.
CosiTiiJited By
ScnitosBrus.&Co.
Fine Clothes Makers
fcaltinore-NewYork
it is known that it is
the height of luck for a bride-to-be
to dream of fairies the night before
So much was
the actual qeremony.
this idea believed in that many N girls
would peruse fairy tales before going
to sleep. /
College Avenue.
Miss Lurlie Mahaffey, of Jefferson,
who has been visiting Mrs. Claude
Cox, returned home yesterday.
ATHENS DENTAL PARLORS
Eyesight Very
Important
JONES-PARKER.
The following invitations are out
for the wedding of a former Athens
boy, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Par
ker, of this city, who has hundreds
of friends here:
Mr. and Mrs Richard Columbus Jones
request the honor of your presence
at the marriage of their daughter
Eunice Leola,
THE POPULAR PRICE DENTISTS.
55.00 Set of Teeth only JS.O*
-: . f&OO 8et of Teeth only $5.0t
$12.00 Set of Teeth only $8.00
Gold Crown and Bridge work,
,*>Y' ’ - vdc - $3-00 and $4.00 a tooth
JDIl A jW Gold Filling $1.0$
All work guaranteed or money refunded.
612-513 Southern Mutual Building. Take elevator and get off at fifth
r. Lady attendant. Phone 964.
Mrs. Ray T. Thomas visited her
sister, Mrs. J. P. Armistead, at Craw
ford, last week.
We scientifically examine your eyes
and grind the correct lenses while
you wait.
THE SCHOOL PATH.
(By Wilbur D. Nesbit, in Good House
keeping Magazine.)
Down the path and up the path to
school he goes today.
Little does he know the path will
lead so far away;
But I linger at the gate and watch
him trudge the street,
Sorrowing for all the frets that wait
his little feet.
plains
peaks;
He shall know the wanderlust that
comes to him who seeks.
He shall hear the cannon roar and see
• the saber gleam,
He shall hear the bugle call across
the redened stream.
and climb the highest
Mrs. R. S. Boynton, of High Shoals,
Is the guest of Mrs. Walter Jones on
Milledge avenue.
J. L. PENDLEY
Optometrist.
Miss Francis Jackson left yesterday
for Winston-Salem to visit her sister,
Mrs. Henry Reeves.
224 Clayton 8L
Mr. Hugh Everett Parker
on Wednesday evening, November the
sixth, Nineteen hundred and twelve
at nine o’clock.
First Baptist Church
Macon, Georgia.-
At Home
after November twentieth*
Greensboro, N. C.
Miss Fannie Sledge has returned
to Milledgevllle.
Miss Coleman, of Milwaukee, is the
abtrective guest of Mrs. W. B. Wil
kinson, on. Milledge avenue.
SYNTHETIC METHOD FOR PIANO.
Albert Ross Parsons, and-MIss Kate
Chittenden, (Metropolitan College of
Music, New York), originators Is the
method par excellence for the devel
opment of the perceptive Faculties,
Rhythm* Touch, and Technic, in young
Mrs. Sam Tribble and Miss Rutb
Tribble spent, the week-end in At
lanta.
Oh, and he shall brother, too, with
all the marvel minds,
Find the hidden truths that only he
who conquers finds;
He shall tread the dusty halls where
learning has been stored,
He shall share the treasury of learn
ing’s miser hoard. J>
Mr. Fred Haselton has returned
from Atlanta.
Mr. Robert Raiford has returned
from Atlanta, where he spent the
week-end.
t’ntil now ke was mine own, his only
path led home;
Now it is a world-old path, that he
sets out to roam.
He thinks that he will come back,
but when he comes again
In bis eyes will be the light caught
in the world of men.
Miss Louise Broyles, of Atlanta,
will be the -attractive guest of Miss
Harriet Benedict for the Cotillion on
Friday evening and the Georgia-Sa-
wanee on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Hilliard Spalding re
turned to Atlanta yesterday, after a
week-end visit to their parents. Me
and Mrs. Joseph S. Stewart.
Mr. C. A. Rowland returned yester
day from Atlanta.
NOTICE.
Tickets for the U. D. C. luncheon
will he given to delegates and hos
tesses Wednesday morning at the Se-
ney-Stovall chapel.
Studio, Emmanual Parish
Pope St, roar of church.
Phone 656-J.
Mrs. Harold Hinton returned yes
terday from West Point
Dr. H. H. Rothe, of the Agricultural
Department of the State University,
has returned from a short trip to
south Georgia.’
But he laughs and runs along, nor
knows how far it is;
He must plod in weariness upon this
path of his.
He bears the music in the tone that
urges from the bell.
Yet all selfishly I hear the measures
of a knell.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bishop have
returned, to the city after an absence
of several months
Miss Julia Benedict’s friends are
welcoming her home, after an absence
of several months in New York, where
she was the guest of her sister, Mrs.
DeForrest Hicks.
The many friends of Master W. B.
Thornton wlU regret to know he is
very ill. ‘ ' v ‘,
Always on, and never back, the path
he takes must lead
Oue of the world of dream, into the
world of deed.
Trials there, and victories, and fu
tile war and quest,
Now he takes the age-old path that
never gives us rest.
IMPORTANT NOTICE.
Any member of the woman’s club
who wishes tickets to the lnucheon
telephone Mrs. T. F. Green, No. 51 or
Mrs. H. C. Conway, No. 9052.
Miss Stella Asbury, of Clarkeavllle,
who has been the guest of Miss Ber
tha Huggins, left yesterday for Al-
bevllle, S. C.
Mr. Dozier Lowndes, of Atlanta,
spent the -foefe end in the city
Miss Lucy Bird has returned to
Hosbhton.
(Continued on pace S.)
Miss Julia Thompson, of Covington,
arrives in the city Friday to be the
guest of iMiss Jennie Arnold.
Down the path and up the path to
school he goes today,
Knowing not it leads him to a world
so far away.
He will come back again, but will
have left the joy
That was mine until today when still
I bad my boy.
COTILLION AT DUPREE HALL.
FYiday evening the German club of
the University will give a most en
joyable cotillion.
But the wonder of it all! The folk
that he shall meet,
Heroes that are his to know, and
royalty to greet;
lie shall sail the sullen seas Magel
lan-wise and reach
Alien land and barren strand and
storm-swept reef and beach.
Miss Gene Reid, who has been
spending the past two months with
her sister,
Mrs. Preston Brooks, re
turned to her home in Eatonton on
Sunday.
HOTEL HEADQUAR-
GEORGIAN
. TERS.
All interested in the convention of
the Daughters of the Confederacy of
Georgia to begin here this evening
will please note the following impor
tant announcement:
The Georgian hotel will be the head
quarters of the, visitors immediately
Instead of going
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY.
It takes a higher order of courage
to withstand temptation and to allign
yourself with the right and the just
Miss Edith Branson is in Rome, the
guest of Miss Marion Dean. She was
one of the attractive visitors at the
nine o’clock German on Thursday
evening.
11- shall fare through wondrous
upon their arrivaL
to the trains to meet their guests the
Athens hostesses are asked to go to
the Georgian hotel. All delegates will
go directly from the trains to the
Georgian hotel and will there be as
signed to their homes and will there
be met by their hostesses to be from
the hotel carried to the various homes
of the city.
Let all delegates report immediately
upon arrival at the Georgian.
Let all hostesses call at the hotel
for their guests.
Mrs. Wallace filler, of Macon, is
the guest of (her sister, Mrs. Fulton
Varner, on Milledge avenue.
Mrs. J. Snelling Young, of Stephens,
spent yesterday in the city.
Miss Zora Fambrough, of Watkins-
ville, spent yesterday in the city.
STEIN BLOCK CLOTHES
For Men and Young Men
Mrs. J. B. Wier -has returned from
Tallulah Falls.
AM PECK CLOTHES
For Boys and Children
Mrs. E. B. Ivey will have as her
guests (during the U. D. C. Convention,
Mrs. Sam Jones, of Atlanta. Mrs. A.
McD. Wilson, of Atlanta, and Miss
Mattie Sheibley, of Rome.
YTRAGOOn
SOCIAL HOUR AT OCONEE ST.
SCHOOL.
Friday afternoon the first mothers*
meeting of the scholastic year was
held at Oconee St School
There being two new teachers in
the corps and so many new patrons
In the school the time, after outlin
Ing the work for the ensuing year
and the election of officers, was de
voted to a musical program and social
Intercourse .
Refreshments of tea and sandwich
es being served the mothers were In
vited to the different rooms to in
spect work of the children.
All left voting the afternoon one
of the most pleasant and profitable
ever spent and with the determination
to do more for the school and the
children.
You Will
Have Your Own Reasons
Clothes that have made our store
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Winship Wood
ruff will arrive in Atlanta the latter
part of this week. Their return will
be marked by a number of pleasant
affairs in honor of the bride who was
Miss Nell Hodgson, of Athens.—Jour
nal.
famous. Why?
the best fitting- and best made clothes
in America
For choosing the Boys’ Clothes you buy, and for
choosing your place to buy them. The reasons for
buying here are WINGFIELD’S make, security
of high quality, careful service in seeing that you
get what you want, and a positive, unlimited guar
antee of your continued satisfaction : : :
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gwin have re
turned fro mthglr bridal tour and are
with Mr. Gwin’s parents at Chateau
Le Vert until their own. home is re
modeled.—Augusta Herald.
RICH AUTUMNAL SHADES
PREDOMINATE
Mr. Henry G.'Howard has returned
from Lexington, where he spent the
week-end with-his parents
We can show you a large variety
of patterns in all the leading models.
Mrs. Roy Marrieble, of Bishop,
spent yesterday In the city
Dr. Samuel C. Benedict and Dr. Ra
vaud S. Benedict left yesterday after
noon for Tampa, Fla., to attend the
Eleventh Annual session of the Asso
ciation of Seaboard Air Line Railway
surgeons of which Dr. Benedict, se
nior, is president, by whom the meet
ing will he called to order Wednes
day morning. Dr. Ravaud Benedict is
on the program to read a phper Thurs
day morning on Car Sanitation. He
will return home Saturday, his father
returning Sunday.
Come in and look ’em over now.
Mrs. Tom P. Vincent has returned
(fom a delightful stay at Marietta.
Mrs. Frank Harold, of AmericuB,
who has been attendln gthe State Fed-
eration «of Woman’s Clubs In Atlan
ta this week, is now the guest of Mr.
and Mrs. B. S. Walker, of Monroe.
She will attend the U. D. C. conven
tion in Athens on the 20th—Journal.
The Shop of Quality