Newspaper Page Text
SOCIETY.
PEOPLE COMING AND GOING.
Mrs. H. M. Comer and the Misses
Comer, who have been spending the
summer at Lake- Toxaway, will return
to the city next week, and will leave
a short time after for a trip to New
doik. Miss Lilia Comer will resume
her studies at Briar Cliff, N. Y.
Mr. Paul T. Haskell, Jr., who has
been North for some time, returned
home yesterday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Elliott, Miss
Harriet Elliott, and the Messrs. El
liott, will return Sept. 16 from White
Sulphur Springs, Va.
Miss Annie Maclean, who has been
spending some weeks with Mr. Edward
Maclean, at Lake Toxaway, returned
home yesterday morning.
Mrs. John S. Howkins, Miss Maude
Heyward, Miss Eleanor Wimbush and
the Messrs. Howkins, who have been
at Brevard, are now at Fairfield
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Gibbes are
at St. Catherine’s.
Mrs. Julian Chisholm and her little
This chic little suspender frock is made of black and white shepherd’s
plaid wool cloth. It is to be worn with dainty shirt waists of linen, pique
or lawn, and is appropriate for school wear.
son left during the week for Balti
more to visit Mrs. Levering.
Mrs. Julian Hartridge and her
children are expected about Oct. 1.
to spend two or three months with
Mrs. Hartridge's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
A. E. Moynelo.
Mr. and Mrs. Horace A. Crane and
M'.ister Averill Crane will return to
morrow from Saluda.
Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Remshart, Miss
Remshart, and Mrs. F. R. Clarke; who
have been spending the summer at
White Bluff, will return to the city
Monday.
Miss Lucy Barrow will spend the
coming winter at home, and next year
will enter Bryn Mawr College, Penn
sylvania.
Mrs. Anderson W. Carmichael and
the Misses Carmichael have returned
from Flat Rock.
Maj. James B. Erwin. U. S. A., who
has been spending several days with
his mother and relatives, at the Isle
of Hope, has left for Fort Leavenworth,
Kansas.
Miss Kollock, who has been spend
ing the summer at Brevard, will return
home next week.
Mrs. A. B. Girardeau. Miss Gladys
Girardeau, and Mr. Claude Girardeau
have returned from Flat Rock.
Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Train are at
Brevard.
Mrs. John R. Davis and two sons
and Miss Anna Hafley returned home
yesterday from Swannanoa Springs,
X. c.
Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Close have
gone from Saluda, N. C„ to High
Shoals. - _ _
Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Baron are at
the Wheeler, Hendersonville, after a
stay at Asheville.
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Harty and
Masters William and Anthony Harty,
will leave on the 15th for a trip
to New York.
Mr. John R. Davis, Mr. C. A. Mun
ster and Mr. Dave Middleton left last
night for St. Louis to visit the World's
Fair.
Mrs. C. C. Ely and Miss Elsie Ely
left yesterday afternoon for New York.
Mlbs Ely will enter Smith College.
Mrs. E.*M. Haslam. who has been
at Saratoga for some time, will leave
there in a day or two for White Pfstns,
N. Y.
Miss Helen Kehoe and Mr. Frank
Kchoe left yesterday for Baltimore.
Miss Kehoe will enter Notre Dame, and
Mr. Kehoe will resume his studies at
'ne Dental College.
Miss Kate Norton, who hs* hern re
"'dlng for some time In Miami, Is
'‘siting relatives In Ihs city.
Vt II.EViH -111.1 USTKI*.
The marriage of Mr, H. L. Wllensky
Havannah and Mls Mary Bluestelsi
‘ 'hai lesion, was solemnised this
-*k In Charleston si the HI. Philip
Street Synagogue, Miss Ida Deltrh of
'■ntieh wee one of the hrldestnald>. j
’her kavannsh guests present were
•M and Mis H. Wllensky, M Motor
‘ ‘•held, B. Wllensky, Jr., Aleaandtr
Sutker, .T. T. Wilenskv, and Misses
Kay Rayzin and Rebecca Wilensky.
Mr. S. W ilensky, Jr., was best man.
A supper *was served after the cere
mony.
SAVANNAH’! ADVANTAGES.
Mr. Walter G. Cooper, secretary of
the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce,
vas in the city for a few hours yester
day, leaving on the City of Atlanta
for New York. While here Mr. Cooper
gave words of praise to Savannah for
her many advantages as a commercial
center. The great possibilities in the
way of reduced freight rates for the in
terior by way of Savannah from the
Eastern markets were pointed out.
Gordon Inatltntr'* Opening.
Barnesville, Ga., Sept. 9.—The open
ing of the fall term of Gordon Insti
tute yesterday marked the beginning
of its lifty-third year. Nearly all of
last year’s students were back and
many new ones, making it probably
the largest enrollment in the history
of the institution. There were hun
dreds of citizens and patrons present
and interesting addresses were made
by Prof. E. Albert Smith. Warrenton,
Va., the new president, Prof. Charles
M. Neal. Atlanta, the new vice presi
dent. and Col. W. W. Lambdin, rep
resenting the board of trustees. The
other new teachers are Prof. H. D.
Blackwell, Staunton, Va., teacher of
English and sciences; Miss Mazie Bos
mijian, Atlanta, music teacher, and
Miss Lida Wilson, Gainesville, Ga.,
teacher of elocution and physical cul
ture. It is expected that the War De
partment will announce the new com
mandant in a few days.
AT THE THEATER
Songs of the fatherland, songs that
the lover sings to his sweetheart in
the Alpine Heights, and songs that
the shepherd intones to his flock in
the Suabien lowlands form important
features in Messrs. Bro'adhurst and
Currie’s farce entitled "Fritz and
SAVANNAH MORNING NEWS: SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 10. 1904.*
CASINO
Week commencing: Sept. 5.
Evenings 9 p. m.
MATINEES
Monday. Wednesday and
Saturday, 5 p. in.
Union
Square
Minslrel
Company
DIRECT' FROM NEW
YORK
In a Whirlwind of Fun.
LAST WEEK OF SEASON.
Snitz,” and in which they will present
those well-known German dialect
comedians. Mason and Mason, in this
city Monday night. The piece revolves
around the doings of a pair of Ger
man emigrants, one a burglar and the
other a thief taker, who in their
mysterious way manage to get into
the meshes of a matrimonial agent
who intends to palm them off as noble
ELEANOR ELKINS
Suing Bath House Proprietor Who Said Her Suit ( Bathing ) Was
Indecent.
New York, Sept. 6.—Eleanor Elkins, one of the "Show Girls” in the
"Isle of Spice” company, now playing at the Majestic Theater, has be
gun suit for J 5.000 through her lawyer, Charles W. Dayton, against John
T. Egan, proprietor of the baths at One Hundred and Forty-ninth street
and Hudson river, because, she alleges, he told her th'at her bathing su't
was not decent.
Miss Elkins, with other members of the company, went to the
baths on Sunday, the young woman wearing a bathing suit of black and
white material, consisting of close fitting trunks and jacket. The young
woman swam half way across the river and returned to her bath house. When
she was preparing to leave, she alleges, Egan came up to her and said
that he did not want her to visit his bath houses agbin.
Miss Elkins pressed him for a reason, she says, and he finally said in
the presence of witnesses, according to the young woman, that the costume
she wore was indecent. The young woman protested that she had worn it at
the beaches near Boston and that there it had been considered quite pretty,
and as she went in bathing to swim and not to wade she could not be ham
pered with skirts.
She asked Egan for an apology, she said, and when he refused placed
the matter in the handt of her lawyer. She says she will push the case
until she gets at least an apology from the bathhouse keeper.
"After dinner sit a fohile;
After supper \valk a mile”—
After All
Uneeda
Biscuit
5 C
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
men. whom he was asked to supply
for the entertainment of a number of
dowagers and debutantes at a water
ing resort.
NEGRO ES~AR REST EDFO R
TRYING TO WRECK TRAIN.
Two of Them Are Said to Have Con.
feseetl Their Gnilt.
Roanoke, Va., Sept. 9.—Detectives to
day captured Joe Furquin, ‘Major’
Guthrie and Roland Gerst. three ne
groes wanted for attempting to wreck
a passenger train on the Southern
Railway at a point near South Boston,
Va., some time ago.
The men -were arrested near the scene
of the attempted wreck and a telegram
received here this evening from a de
tective is to the effect that Guthrie
and Gerst have confessed. The men
were placed in jail at South Boston
after a preliminary hearing, at which
they were sent on to the grand Jury.
PRINCE ALERT*LOWERS
THE PACING RECORD.
Syracuse. N. Y., Sept. 9.—Prince
Alert to-day broke the pacing record
for geldings, going the mile at the
State Fair track in 1:59*4. which beats
the record by % second. The first quar
ter was made in 29%. the half in 69
and the three-quarters in 1:29%.
Negro Legally Executed.
Charlotte, N. C., Sept. 9.-—Jesse Al
len, negro, was legally executed at Ox
ford. N. C., to-day for criminally as
saulting a little girl some months ago.
The hanging was private. The negro
showed wonderful nerve.
mt
It is a notable number in many ways —in con-
tributions, in illustrations, in fine printing. Most
important to its five million readers is the
1* s the month o( all others when dress is
' uppermost in “ Her” mind. It is the month she
- prove that the waiting has not been in vain. There is no use
TUPt > n trying to describe the fascinations of the month’s fashion
features. You must see the magazine itself. The colored
plates are better than ever before, as we promised they would
..be, but here also the magazine is its own best advertisement.
jgt-i Anew series of interest to all music
lovers begins in this number: “The Loves
j °f Great Composers,” by Gustav Kobbe.
In f] ( The opening article is entitled “ Beethoven
and His Immortal Beloved,” with many
' LeEls illustrations, including a hitherto unpublished
'■ jf/ The now-famous series on Personal Beauty by \ -..e
A Dr. Grace Peckham Murray, deals this month with
'°fi certain physical exercises for bodily symmetry and
grace of carriage. These are practical articles and fjtk
t^°USan( k W ° men ° Ver arc being
- j Richard LeGallienne contributes a beau
j best of the writings of this modern master
i/_|/ is both interesting to the general reader and
Idj | technically helpful to those who would
f - Hallowe’en party will attract all
~ presents several novel features.
77ie way to be sure to get YOUR copy
before your newsdealer s supply is exhausted is to
BUY IT TO-DAY!
The Delineator may be secured of your newsdealer, of any Bultericic agent, or ol the publishers at 15c. a copy, SI.OO a year.
THE BUTTERICK PUBLISHING COMPANY (Limkod). BUTTERICK BUILDING. NEW YORK
JACKSON & GUTMAN, Agents Butterick Patterns.
HOTELS A.\D SIMMER RESORTS.
Gentlemen
of the
South
their wives and daughters, will find
all the comfort and repose of a well
ordered private residence, as well
aa all the advantages of a modern
hotel, at
Hotel Algonquin,
New York,
59-65 West 44th Street,
between Sth and 6th aves., same
block with Harvard, Yale and N. Y.
Yacht Clubs. Convenient to shops,
theatres and all transit lines. A
high class fireproof hotel, offering
superior service at moderate prices.
Bw
Brdrootn and Btb tl <o*B
Sitting Boom, Brdrasm gsd Ratk 4 M •
Sitting Room, t Bedroom*. 2 Balk* S to S
Sitting Boon S Bedroom,. 3 Both, S to iS
Maid*’ or VgloU’ Boom 1
BooUorut. American Hu, 12 DoOg.
or > la Carta
Oonupaodaaoe Solicited. Booklet.
DU SOTO Uai'i:L, SaVMUish. Gs.
Open all year. Large airy rooms;
7,000 feet piaszas; 100 rooms with
private t>ath. Open air cafe. Illumin
ated grounds. Golf links and soa
; bathing within easy rsach. Summer
rates June to October.
• *" ,l# ** n,,T hiroiebed i
i #M Perler. tax) (J /
*1 room ‘•aihroom. private A
/ telephone Ins new be II .
| ( tel ter reOasd petrosa V
Ip,, a „ Feeklonehle. eeneenieet a week
ter tee ***“pe theaters, rail for two
fowls, hummer rates te with
maetteotguasM. meats
Cnltfae et sated esceUeocT ebiie terries.
vmUt m (lmntim< m
HOTEL GALLATIN,
*•• w. set* nt, •••, e. M g 'r
1 how (pr|ygg
KALOLA
(Crystalized Mineral Water)
Nature’s Perfect Family Remedy*
Cures Indigestion, Constipation, Liver and Kidney
Troubles.
Cramp Colic and Acute Indigestion relieved immedi>
ately by taking one teaspoouful Kalola in a glass of
water.
Kalola Cures Rheumatism
and kindred ills by removing the cause of disease.
,f Take Kalola Six Days and Eat Anything You Want/*
Prescribed by physicians.
For sale by druggists and general merchants, 50c
and SI.OO.
KALOLA COMPANY,
21 23 Bay Street, West, • Savannah, Ga.
W. G. BREWER, Vice President and General Manager.
Fancy Baskets.
See the new line we have just opened—they are
novelties and beauties every one.-the price will move
them quick. This line comprises Baskets for
Serving Boom Waste Paper Baskets
Sitting Boom
Hampers
Bnth Hoorn
Boudoir Work Stands.
LINDSAY & MORGAN.
sr Moot s AXU COI-I.EOKN,
MOUNT DE SALES
4< • •letup of the Vleltotlon
CArOMKVILLE nesr HMtlmore. MD.
t,s‘sl.ltabr and ISM Htilidlage Bbd grounds #
teseire sod Mlreetlve; sltuetlon healthful
beautiful rlew n Hetusaore • hills. river sad
bar sc Mil tile hy eiertrte cars. Thorough
•orb In Kaarllsb, ecleuee, must* art end las
suagae lUuatretaa cataloguae os tpplhetivs.
Atlanta Collagi of Pharmacy
Greetei detnaad for our rrabutiee tkaa we
•as euwe.v Add fate Or Georgs >, Fares
trees l Vreitehail Austin, Us.
BOILER TUBES
J. D. WEED & CO.
El
7