Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, March 29, 1907, Image 14

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THE ATLANTA UJiUK(ilA.\ r AND NEWS. FRTDAT. MAI(i M J», 1T*T| SOCIETY... Mrs. George C. Bell, Editor. artsss.) *—»• And Woman’s Interests ALL THINGS MUST PASS AWAY. In reply to the request made by this department a few days ago for an old poem, published twenty years ago tn an Atlanta, Ga., paper. The Georgian gratefully acknowledges the receipt of the two following poems. Which one is desired by Mr. Wade, he only will be able to decide. “THIS. TOO, SHALL PASS AWAY." Art thoo In misery, brother? This I say; Be comforted: Thy grief shall pass swey. Art thou In danger? Still let reason sway Asd cling to heps. This, too. shall pass easy. In all thine anguish J>o rays of laureled glory ronnd thee play? Klnglike. art thou? This, too, shall pass away. Whatever thou art. where'er thy footsteps Teed’ , ™'ftdom's Totce: All things must P *"-PAft, HAMILTON HAYNE. AN ARAB LEGEND. ling." said he, "life hath Its changes Yesterday’iore and riches for us shone; Today wh look about, and ham not any’ And day by day. and year by year that itnf°flnds something we hold fast Is Giro me n 'word to eomfort me In my woes, TO keep me watchful when fair Joys Something that like an amulet shall be. The king said, smiling: "This, tuo, will pass orer!" Atlanta, Ga. -D. N. G. BOX PARTY TO JOHN DREW. Among those occupying boxes at the John Drew performance Saturday evening will be Miss Mary Thomas, Miss Harry Stockdell, Miss Joale Stockdell, Mr. Dick Bell. Mr. Hugh Adams and Mr. Hugh Robinson. 'MASTER SPENCER BOYD'6 NEIGHBORHOOD PARTY. Saturday morning Master Spencer Boyd will entertain a number of tils young friends at an Easter egg hunt, to be given on the lawn of his home, on Washington street. His guests will Include only hla little neighborhood friends. CANTATA AT ALL SAINTS. On Good Friday evening at g o'clock at All Saints church the choir of the church will sing a sacred cantata, "Tha Message From the Cross.” This cantata Is the work of Mr. Will C. McFarlane, organist at the church of St. Thomas, in New York, and will also be rendered In that church on Good Friday. The soloists at All Saints Friday evening will be Misses Nellie Nix. soprano; Miss Thomwell Gamble, mtxza-soprann; Miss Leonora Owsley, contralto; Mr. Frank Cundell, tenor: Mr. George McDaniel, baritone. Special mention must be msde of the |een Fambro. EASTER EGG HUNT. The primary class of the First Meth odist Episcopal church Sunday school are Invited by their teachers, Mrs. Wil liam King. Mrs. Preston Arkwright, Miss Hattie Spier and Mr. Morris, to an Easter egg hunt on Saturday after noon at 3:30 o'clock. Mrs. Eugene Black has kindly offered her beautiful lawn for the occasion and all expect to have a good time. Parents are also cordially Invited. Take Peachtree car to Brookwood. YOUNG LADIE8 OF FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH TO GIVE AN EASTER EGG HUNT. The Young Ladles' Society of the First Baptist church will give an Easter egg hunt next Saturday afternoon at Grant Park. A small admission will be charged, and the tickets can be secured at the Cyclorama. Many children, as well as older persons, are expected to be out at the park to participate In the exercises. A beautiful rabbit will b* given to the child who finds the goldkn egg. Many children will doubtless eagerly search for the prize, and the contest will be exciting. A good time Is promised all who attend. VANDIVER^CLEVELAND. A very pretty home wedding w'as that which was solemnised on the aft ernoon of March 24 at 4 o’clock at “Hillside,” the country home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Cleveland, at Toccoa, when their daughter. Miss Eflle Cleveland, was united In marriage to Mr. 1’lnekney Vandiver, of Carnesvllle, the Rev. C. T. Burgess performing the ceremony In the presence of the Immediate relatives only. The home was artistically decorated In ferns and spring blossoms, the color scheme, purple and white, being carried out In the decorations. The bride, a beautiful brunette, was handsomely gowned In Irish point lace, and was unusually handsome. As Miss Elhe Cleveland the bride was admired by a large circle of friends because of her attractive personality. Mr. Vandiver 1s a successful young business man. s The bride and groom left Immediate ly, after the ceremony for their future homo In Carnesvllle, Ga. SIDNEY LANIER AT COX COLLEGE. One of the pleasantest features of the life at Cox College Is the recitals given Thursday mornings. At this time lessons are suspended for one-half hour and visitors and students are enter tained with a literary or musical pro gram in the handsome chapel. Thursday morning the Lanier Liter ary Society had chnrgc, and In the language of their president. Miss Allco Bacon Cox. made their first stage bow. This sorlcty was organised this ses sion. The following Interesting pro gram was rendered. All the songs and selections were the compositions of Sidney Lanier; Introduction. “The Growing Fame of Bldney I-anler”—By the president. Miss Alice Bacon Cox. Biographical Sketch—Miss Sadie Wellons. Rending. “The Revenge of Hamlsh”— Miss Lillian Jewell. "A May Song," Carmichael—Miss A!- excellent work of the chorus, which, under the direction of Mr. William Ar- naud. has reached a high degree of efficiency. cakeTale. The ladles of the West End Presby terian church will hold their cake sale Saturday. March 30. at 206 Lee street, next to the Baptist parsonage. In West End. Reading, "The*Song of the Chatta hoochee”—Misses Horne, Baldwin, Meador and McManus. "Sunset," Dudley Buck—Miss Annie Calhoun. "Valse tie Salon,” Wacks—Miss Min nie Olln Adams. "A Critical Estimate of tlje Poet’’— Miss Louise Carlton. Polanalse, No. 2, In E major, F. Llsst —Miss Alice Bacon Cox. WHEAT I A kernel of it contain* every element necessary for the sustenance of the body. To make it available as food without dominating any of these elements and at the same time to make it palatable, has been the work of Dr. Price, the greatest authority on pure food products. In its most pleasing form, retaining all of its nutri tion and wholesomeness, WHEAT, as a food, is given to the public under the name of DR. PRICE’S WHEAT FLAKE CELERY FOOD Palatable—Nntrltloua—Easy of Digestion and Ready to Eat Cm te urrel Set. rat la s Sot ores for ■ lev silutu; er took lo keftlH ant; L IOa apackap All Groeem package BEAUTIFUL EASTER JEWELRY. We have something In nice Jewelry for everybody. The Lady, the Gen tleman. the Baby and the Mlsa The latest and the best. It appeals Irresist ibly to the moet highly cultured taste. , EUGENE V. HAYNES CO. Diamond Importers. 37 Whitehall Street. EA8TER SERVICES AT THE LUTHERAN CHURCH. The Easter services of the English Lutheran Church of the Redeemer, Rev. E. C. Cronk, pastor, will be of etpeclal Interest. At the morning serv tee at 11 o'clock a class of young men and girls wilt be received by confirms tlon. No more beautiful and Impress- live service can be found than this con flrmatlon service of the Lutheran church, by which It has been the cus tom to receive the young people Into full church membership since the days of the great leader of Protestantism, Martin Luther. Other members will be received by adult baptism and letters of trans fer. The church will be decorated ... white and green and the girls of the confirmation class will wear pure white. The music will be In keeping with ths spirit of the day. The holy commun ion will be administered on Sunday at 11 a. m. and also at 8 p. m. A special service will be held on Good Friday at I p. m. JERNIG AN-AUSTIN, Thursday evening at 8 o'clock, at tho home of tfie bride’s parsnts, at 225 Oakland avenue. Miss Maude Jernlgan and Mr. 8. Y. Austin were quietly mar ried In the presence of a small assem bly of relatives. The bride Is a popular and attractive young woman and It Is regretted by a wide circle of friends that she will not make her home In Atlanta. Mr. Austin Is superintendent of the Whittier Mills, and Is a rising young business man. Immediately after the ceremony the bride end groom left for Chattahoochee. Ga., their future home. COX-FRANKLIN. Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Franklin, of Toc coa, announce the engagement of their daughter, Alma Belle, to Mr. James R. Cox. the wedding to be solemnized Wednesday evening. April 3, at the home of the bride's parents. WILLING WORKERS TO GIVE AN EASTER EGG HUNT. The Willing Workers’ Society of the Second Baptist church Is an enterpris ing band of little folks who take espe cial pride and Interest in the clothing each year of one of the little orphans at ths orphans' home. Friday afternoon at 3:30 this society of little folks will give an Easter egg hunt at 164 Washington street, and hop* to realise a goodly sum for the benefit of their charge at the orphans’ home. A nominal sum will be charged for admission, and It Is hoped that the oc casion will be well patronized. LITTLE MISS MOORE TO GIVE EASTER EGG HUNT. A delightful feature of Saturday aft ernoon will be the Easter egg hunt which little Miss Cornelia Moore will give at the home of her parent*, Mr. and Mrs. Wllmer Moore, on Peachtree •treet. HOME-MADE CAKES AND PIE8. The regular Saturday eale of home made cakes, pies, candles, etc., of the Young Ladies' Aid 8oclety will be held at 168 Peachtree street. Benefit of the organ fund. Telephone orders to 1364' Main. TO GOVERNOR DAVIDSON. Mr. William L. Peel entertained at an elegant dinner Wednesday evening at the Capital City Club In honor of Governor Davldaon and a party of dis tinguished gentlemen. The table decorations were In pink and the occasion was one of great pleasure; With Governor Davidson were Sen ator Vilas, Mr. Porter. Mr. Whitehead, Mr. Burns and Mrs. Bancroft, of Wis consin: Mr. Post, of New York; Mr. Bradshaw, of the Louisville and Nash-, vllle. Invited to meet these gentlemen were Governor Terrell. Hon. Hoke Bmlth, Mr. S. M. Inman. Colonel Sam Tate, Mr. Will V. Zimmer. Mr. Henry S. Jackson and M r. W. H. Kiser. Beautify <he Complexion Nadinola CREAM, the un equal ed beautificr it endoned by thousand* and guaranteed to remove freckle*, pimple*, liver-spot*, ten. sallowne**. etc., the worst case in 20 dey*. and restore the beauty of youth. Price 30 cent* and $1.00. by leading druggist* or mail. Prepared by NATIONAL TOILET CO.* Pirl*. Te*a. CHILDREN Teething Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup »foTHEK8 s FOH * J r THEfRCHILDItEN WHILE TEETHING WITH PERFECT til CESS, rr SOOTHES THE CHI LI), 80FTE; THE GUMS. ALLAYS ALL PAIN. CUB WIND COLIC, and Is ths BEST itEMEl FOR DIARKUlEA. Sold by druggists In every part of the world. Twenty-five Cents a Bottle. Guaranteed under the Pure Food and Drug act, June 10, 1006. Serial num ber 109*. THE MODISH HANDWRITING. Youngish mothers of well-grown daughters are waking up to the fact that what was held to be a proper handwriting for a woman twenty years ago is no longer taught In the schools. The queer angular hand that women still affected ten years ago has given place to a handwriting with curves, and the vertical writing of a few years ago Is disappearing before a moderate slant. The woman whose handwriting Is marked by the extreme form of the angular style Is as easily recognized for a person no longer young as the woman who persists In the fashions of 1892. Some unmarried women who like to think their state not Immutable would be glad to get rid of thelr\tell- tale handwriting. The younger grandmothers who did not wake to the angular hand In time to change noefr retain the essentials of the old copperplate style that was taught In the ’8ls and ‘70s. It Is aston ishingly neat and dear, but as mani festly of an earlier generation as the honpskirt or bustle. Tho girls of today are reverting to the handwriting of the generation be fore the copperplate was Invented. The women who were still young In 1840 used this rather unconventional style. If you happen to have ft few bundles of old letters belonging to the middle Ice Cream for : Easter Sunday Beginning Easter Sunday, March 31st, Nunnallys Ice Cream will be delivered to any part of the city or shipped by express ,to cities throughout the South. Prompt deliveries and a product of the highest qual ity are characteristics of our ice cream department, and orders entrusted to our care always receive the best attention. # Order now for Easter! Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hopkins left Wednesday for Florida to Join Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence on tholr private car en route to New York. Mr. and Mrs. Hopkins will return to Atlanta about the 16th of April. Miss Rheta Hervey, who hat been the guest of Miss Julian Perdue, has re turned to Savannah. rn's writing of that day and that of their children, and discover that the generation of today writes more llko the grandmothers than the mothers. A stilt earlier generation of American women, some of whom were born In the closing years of the eighteenth cen tury, Imitated the neat handwriting that prevailed among men a geneta- tlon. earlier. The men of the period Immediately after the Revolution wrote a large formal hand, and their daugh ters Imitated It. but softened the lines. The next generation was less conven tional, and then came copperplato with Its neat artificiality. Old-fashioned women even of today find It hard to conform to the modern fashion of scratching off a short note In haste. They have the old tradition that any written communication save of the must formal or trivial kind must be a letter of considerable length, and the heavy, unllned paper of today Is an offense to their traditions. The leisure of an earlier time and the difficulties of travel were the excuse for long letters. Between swift express trains and the long-distance telephone women are losing the art of letter writ- Walsh. •** Ing, and De Qulncey's dictum that to see the best of English prose style you must rifle the mails and read the let ters of clever, well-brought-up women Is hardly as trnc as It once was. 8PEND-THE-DAY PARTY. Mrs. John McEachem will entertain Informally at a spend-the-day party Saturday at her home. In West End. for Mr, and Mrs, E. M. Bass, of Car rollton. IN HONOR OF MRS RUNETTE. Mrs. Wilson Runette will be the guest of honor at an afternoon tea to be given next week by .Mrs. Guy Mitchell. EASTER GIFTS FOR HER. A basket In ths shape of an egg tilled with bonbons and tied with satin rib bon. . box of sweetmeats with a little downy chick standing guard on the cover, the box tied with purple rib bons. A wicker basket Ailed with growing violet*. long-stemmed green and white crystal vase Riled with lilies. v ‘A bouquet of orchids and white vio lets. A window box of primroses or a pot of tulips. A rosary of amethyst. A prayer book with tooled leather covers and clasps of wrought metal, like the book taken to church by the pious women of the middle ages. A tiny hat elaborately trimmed and put up daintily In a little square box, exactly like those that are sent home by Mme. Fellcle or Mile. Fleurette. A porcelain egg lined with velvet and holding a Jewelled ring, a brooch, or some other qoveted treosure. | A dozen Jonquils with a love letter. JAPANESE WEDDING. The younft ladles of the Christian church will give a play Friday even ing at 8 o'clock at the Cable hall for the benefit of the new Associate Re formed Presbyterian church. A small admission will be charged. S. E. C. CLUB ENTERTAINED. Misses May and Leila Culberson en tertained 'the 8. E. C. Club Thursday at their home In West End. The house was decorated for the occasion with lilacs and lilies. After the game deli cious refreshments were Berved. Those present were; Mrs. John Mc- Eachern, Mrs. Frank Cox, Mrs. William Jenkins, Sirs. J. O. Hardwick, Mrs. Ed ward Mntthews, Mrs. Howard Crum ley. Mrs. Fanny Humphreys, Mrs. G. A. Howell. Mrs. George Sharpe, Mr*. E. V. Carter, Mrs. M. L. Troutman. Mrs. T. A. Lovelace, Mrs. Ed Colllngs. Miss Mildred Cabanlss, of Atlanta, will be among the many attractive vis itors In the city during Easter week. She will he with Miss I,lls Cabanlss nnd several pleasant affairs are planned for her pleasure—Macon News. Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Hlrsch are the guests of Mrs. John Reid, at Macon. Miss Katharine Gholstin will visit In Augusta next week. Mrs. H. M. Patty and Miss Katherine Patty leave next week for a visit to Mississippi. Miss Eugenia Oglesby left Thursday for a visit to Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Moore are housekeeping at 472 North Boulevard. Miss Neelk Lou Walton, of Newnan, Is the guest of Miss Katherine Wooten. Mr*. Charles Goodman has left the city for a three weeks' visit to Mobile and New Orleans. Mrs. Charles Rouaae will be the guest of friends at Chattanooga next week. Mrs. H. D. Jennings Is visiting friends at Knoxville. Mrs. Eugene Mitchell Is the guest of Mrs. Gale. the Easter holidays Airs. Daisy Mrs. Rebecca Haas, of Indianapolis, Is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Haas. Miss Willamette Gale has been called AMERICAN DENTAL PARLORS 191-2 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga. (OVER SCHAUL & MAY)., Bubber Plates ... 22-K Gold Crown Porcelain Crown Bridge Work, Per Tooth ' Painless Ex tracting with all plate work Hours, 8 a. m. till 8 p. m. Sundays, 9 a. m. till 4 p. m. No more Dread of the Dental Chair. home by the Illness of her mother. Mias Virginia Arnold is now at ths Battery Park Hotel and will remain In Asheville until after the horse show Mr. and Mrs. Seely, who has been the guest* of their son and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Seely, for several weeks, will return to their home at Newark, N. J., on Sunday. Miss Louise Johnson will visit Miss Louise Falllgant, at Savannah, next week. Miss Sarah Wadley will arrive on Monday next as the guest for the horse ahow of Miss Bertha Barret. While here she will be complimented with several Informal entertainments.—Au gusta Herald. Mr. and Mr*. John Walker announce In the Name of Sense, that good common sense of which all of us have a share, how can you continue to buy ordinary soda crackers, stale and dusty as they must be, when for 5^ you can get Uneeda Biscuit fresji from the oven, protected from dirt by a package the very beauty of which makes you hungry. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Furniture and Household Goods AT 20 S. Pryor Street EVERY WEDNESOAY AND SATURDAY. B. BERNARD, Auctioneer the birth of a daughter, Dorothy Eve lyn, on Wednesday at their home oa Tenth street. Mrs. R. M. Clayton and Mrs. W. A. Hansel! have returned from a visit to Marietta. Mrs. W. N. Grist and family, of Ma rietta, will arrive Monday to make their future home in Atlanta. Mr. Ralph Ragan, Mr. Edward Brown, Jr., anil Mr. Milton Dargan. Jr., who are attending college In Athene, will spend Easter in the city. Mr. Johh Wheatley Is In Richmond, Va. Mrs. E. W. Charbonler has returned from a visit df several weeks to Mrs. T. G. Bush, and to Mrs. W. D. Nceblt, at Birmingham. Mr. Robert Wetmore has returned from a business trip through Georgia. Miss Minnie L. Brown Is visiting her aunt, Mrs. T. O. Gollghtly, at Ashe ville. . Mrs. Carrie Buckner has returned from a visit to her cousin, Mrs. Charles 51. Platt, at Asheville, N. C. Mias Eugenia Oglesby left Friday for Richmond, where she will be the guest of Mrs. Lewis Williams. Mrs. L. H. Reid and daughter, Ml*» Mary Julia Reid, of Greensboro, are visiting friends In Atlanta. Mrs. L. M. Hilt and Miss HIU are la New York. Mr*. James Logan, w-ho has heen visiting her daughter, Mrs. Cay Call, In Jacksonville, Fla., will return home next week. Mrs. McCall "hi accompany her for a short visit. GUT FLOWERS MAIL ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION