Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, August 24, 1907, Image 8

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1 J I THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND, NEWS. SOCIETY [1 George C. Bill, Editor, Chirlotte Stewart, . . Selene Armstrong, As>1,, ‘ n '*' AND WOMAN’S INTERESTS THE DREAM MAN. Easy, wheezy, soft and still The dream man climbs In the window alii: Slyly, blyly, dark and dim. The little shadows are hiding him. Over the sill and In the room The dream man comes with his bags of bloom. And rolling rivers and roaring seas, Ami birda with their wonderful melo dies. Easy, wheezy: soft and still. He builds on the counterpane a hill, A Talley down at Its purple feet, A little river that wlndeth sweet. Fruit and berries and vine and rose. And a little fellow that laughing goes Winged In a heaven of wild delight That the dream man brings when he comes at night. —Baltimore Sun PARTIES IN HONOR OF MISSES BLAIR, JACKSON AND DODD. A number of parties are planned next Week for Miss Sarah Jackson, of Charleston, who Is visiting Miss Julia Dodd, and for Miss Willie May Blair, the guest of Miss Annie Lee McKenzie. Tuesday afternoon Miss Agnes Smith will entertain at slz-hand euchre In their honon Her guests will Include Kisses Blair. Jackson, Dodd, Annie Sykes and Mary Illcc, Margaret lluv- erty. May Belle Wright, Margaret Nor- then. Carrie Peabody. Marie Roberts, ■ Lula Dean Jones, Lillian Yow, Martha Lawshe, Annie and Kmma Hill, Ruth Wing. Dorothy Kleiner, Marie Lewis, Louise Riley, C'arollno Muse, Willie Muse, Bessie Jones, Eva Belle Gregg. Tuesday evening Miss Margaret Hav- •rty will entertain a number of young friends In their honor. On Wednesday morning Miss Annie Lee McKenzie, at her home on West Peachtree, will give a euchre party In honor of Miss Julia Dodd, who will leave soon to spend the winter In Charleston, and In honor of Miss Blair and Miss Jackson. Ehgagsmeht of Miss Payne to Mr. Peeples Mrs. Jeannle M. Payne, of Warren ton, Va., announces the engagement of her daughter, Nan, to Mr. Howell Peeples, of Atlanta, the wedding to take place the middle of October, at the home of the bride's mother. In War. renton. PeacQck-Smyly Mr. and Mrs. Charles Harden Peacock, of Macon, announce the engage ment of their daughter, Lillie Mae, to Mr. 8t. Clair Smyly, of Eastman, the wedding to take place on the morning of Wednesday, September If, at their home on Orange street Mrs. George Scipls Writes Interestingly of Her European Travels Palermo, August 3, 1907. Dear Georgian: I am In Palmero, "II Felice," and oh, the "Clcll moon!" I sailed to Tunis, saw the moonlight on the Mediterranean. Our atmos- DINNER AT DRIVING CLUB. The Informnl dinner at which Colo nel and Mrs. Lowry entertained at the Piedmont Driving Club Friday evnlng was a pretty compliment to Mrs. Broughton nnd Miss Antoinette Broughton, of Madison. The table at which the guests were seated was lovely In Its appointments, and in Its artistic decorations of pink and green. The centerpiece was a great basket filled with ferns and with quantities of pink roses. Mrs. Lowry was a most gracious hostess, wearing a smart suit of lav ender with white lingerie blouse. Her hat of white wns trimmed with pink roses and lavender plumes. Mrs. Broughton wore Iliac silk mull, lace trimmed, with white lace hat. Miss Antoinette Broughton was bo- comlngly gowned In pale blue silk, fashioned with lace anil hand-embroid ery. Her blue straw hat was trimmed with plumes. PARTIE8 AT EAST LAKE. A number of congenial parties will witness the canoe races at East Lake, Saturday afternoon and evening. The visitors will go out In the afternoon and take supper remaining afterward for the races. In one party will be Miss Alice Steele, Miss Elizabeth Adair, Miss Mary Brent Smith. Miss Elizabeth High, Mr. and Mrs. Toulman Williams, Mr. Goodruin, Mr. Peteet, Mr. Kennedy, Mr. Ewell Gay. Mr. Frank Adair, Mr. Ronald Ransom, Mr. Ray Powers, Mr. John Glenn. Another party will Include Mis* May Morris, Miss Hattie Newcombe. Miss Loretta Newcoinbo, Miss Helen Mortis, went over the Palazyo Reale (King's Palace). It was lovely, but I have seen so many king's palaces It grows monotonous. I was more Interested In a man and his wife whom I met while visiting the steerage paseen- gers on the ship going to Tunis. He was a high wire shooter, accustomed to making 1,500 francs a wsek, but down on his luck, and forced to go steerage and I wish you could have seen them turn up their noses at the food served In a rusty tin pan, and at the people lying all around asleep on the deck. He was a man of rare Intelligence, and so was his wife of un usual ability, very uncommon people, and he was so loving with her and folded her up so tenderly In her rug—'twas enough to make a woman willing to be a steerage passenger. They had a priceless South Ameri can parrot—could sing and talk In four languages and cost as much to feed as a child. I saw a woman (first class) weeping her heart out at leaving her son In Tunis, and a son, not leaving her. fold her In his arms and kiss her'agaln and again, flrst on one cheek and then on the other, then on the lips, and I thought, “How sweet and loving these Italians are to each other." Boys of some nationalities would have said: “Oh, hush, mamma, you are making a fool of yourself before everybody on this (hip.” I can tell you a story of a young Itnllan boy, almost starving, sitting on a bench In the park, making 2 lira (40 cents) a day. and sending one to his mother and sleeping every night In a box cor, afraid to take off his clothes for fear they would be stolen, and a young American college man, sitting by him, hears his story and gives him a nice room and feeds him every day as he takes his own meals. And the boy has passsd his exami nation, and, If you please, next October will be a Royal Guard, and be a guard In the king's palace, with a lovely uniform and a long sword! This was In Rome, nnd the young American bought himself a very cheap suit and wears It with pleasure to make up for his good deed. He hlmaelf Is thb son of a millionaire. He fell out with his father at 13, walked out of the house with 3150 In his pocket, bought steel at 7 cents, sold It at 35 cents, went to college on It two years, worked his way the laat year, and worked on the railroad In summer and went wlthoutout food absolutely for a week! This Is the kind.of stuff that heroes are made of. I always was professor at 23 In one of the grandeat colleges In America, and he Is going to take the boy, when his three years' service Is up, to America, get him a position as his father’s gardener snd let him go to the university, and give him a chance. The boy gave him his saint's book, the only thing he had that he valued, and for me he took the price of a whole day's work and bought me a "Madonna of Pompeii,” which I wear hese little etorles of real life that I value, I must tell you, I went to see the Cappella Palatine, the finest palace the In chapel In the world, belonging to Jhe Palasza Reale, Palmero, and terlor covered with glass mosaics. Date 1133. There Is a tine display of curious marble here. 1 also saw In Monreale, a suburb of Palmero. St. Ma rla La Nuodo. the most beautiful of all churchea of the middle ages, ex cept St. Mark, In Venice, full of exquisite mosaics and possessing the very the world; out of Its 200 columns, no two alike. Miss May O'Brien. Mr. Will White, Mr. Sidney Phelan, Mr. Percy Taylor, Mr. John Morris, Mr. Ous Dnley of Macon. Mr. and Mrs. Lowry Arnold will have as their guests Miss Liuru Payne. Miss Constance Knowles, Miss Helen Payne, Mr.J.C. Kirkpatrick, Mr. Harvey Oreg. ory, Mr. Burton Clarke. PARTY AT CA8INO, Monday evening the Misses New- eombe, of Macon, who are visiting Misses Mary nnd Helen Morris, will bo honor guests at a largo box parly ut the Casino. _ , . Many happy Informal affair* are be ing planned in their honor. OLD WOMEN TO BEE BASEBALL. Mr. R. T. Browne, manager of the barbers' team, has Invited the Inmates of the Home for Old Women to 'at tend the game on the 2Sth Instant as the guests of Barbers’ Union No. 23. The old ladles will be taken out In automobiles and box seats will be re served for them at the park. KIBBEE-EVANS. Mrs. Charles C. Klbbee has an nounced the engagement of her daugh ter, Annie Louise, to Mr. Charles T. Evans, the wedding to take place in October. ICECREAM FE8TIVAL. The ladles of Asbury church will [lire an Ice cream festival Tuesday evening, August 27, at 110 Davis street. Children will be served from 4 to ( o'clock In the afternoon. All are cor' dlally Invited. JUNIOR CLASS ENTERTAINMENT. Thursday afternoon the social com mittee of the Junior Class No. 1 of the Baptist Tabernacle entertained their dase at the Tabernacle from 3 finest cloisters In In Rome I went to St. Pietro In Vinculo to see Michael Angelo's "Moses,'' nnd the chains with which St. Peter was bound In the Mamee- tine prison In Rome from which the angels released him. In Naples I heard the new opera by Leoncavallo, "Zaza." It was line; also the ever welcome "I Pagllaccl.” It was here I exclaimed: “I can't get the truth out of anybody. Truth truly He* at the bottom of a well!" A witty man present said: "So In Italy even truth lies.” (But no more In Italy than nnywhere else." My next will probably be from Lucerne, and I will write you from Lon don nnd Parts, which I have saved for the laat, because It la the beat. These Zouks I speak of can only be seen at their best In Tunis and Constantinople. The high rope sharp shooter referred to above got a letter that day I met them, giving him a position In New York at 1,500 francs a week for fifteen weeks. I thought that wae line. I And that all over the world love and grief and joy are the same, and they all speak different languages In absence wrung, and the wall o( but tho heartrending ery of a heart a little child are ]ust the same. In Tunis I wns told I could not And the wonderful Zoukl (the covered arcaded streets of the queer bazaars) by myself, but I did. I bought a postal' In the morning of a sweet “silk" Zouk, and lo and behold, I wan dered Into the .very same shop, and there waa the young Arab elttlng there, tho same that was on the postal card. His name Is Uambouchl, and there my Amerlenn friends can buy silk for 6 francs (11) a yard that could not be bought In New York for leas than 13 francs. I went all over the bey's palace, ant. up the hill to sea the lovely view' from the nelvldere. I saw the Arab women dreesed In white, with these black veils that look exactly like black masks. They did look queer None of them were coqulltlsh, dark-eyed hourls like I had read about. Tunis Is very, very beautiful.. In Rome I saw the Onrlbaldl celebration, and oh. the Coliseum Illumi nated! A sight never to be forgotten. I saw a lot of people running and a mob collecting, nnd what do you reckon? A man had walked fast and bumped Into a bottle of wine a woman was carrying ard broken It, and she was vociferating nnd trying to make him pay 3 Ural He offered to l«iy 1. Finally they compromised by hla paying 11-2. Did I tell you ubout the chicken C'polle a la dlable"), and the sign "dogsna” (pronounced "dog gona") that 1 saw that had such a familiar sound to me (being from Georgia)? I went to the city of which It Is said' "See Naples nnd die,” and It Is the lovllest city In the world. Its Galleria n large building with stores and cafes covered with arcades of glass are the Anest In the world, except ono at Milan. 1 met a young Sicilian boy, Epheslo Hetth.al >. 10 years (deer chi) who wo* a beauty, in Rome, and he sang nearly tin wlnls of "Alda" for me! Fancy a child like that singing grand opera, and th£ afternoon I went to see him and hie mother by Invitation In their palace! Next time I will tell you a wonderful xtory of a young btril'nn noble man who ran away from home at 3, made a large fortune In New York, and li going to marry a Sicilian girl In New York at 13. A friend of mine met him when thlz Sicilian nobleman waz coming steerage to be with his aunt and uncle, and there were no more Arst class tickets, and this Sicilian noblemnn was talking on the Arst class deck to my friend, and there was a murder down In hts steerage stateroom, and he was accused of It but my friend and the others proved on alibi for him. Now my friend has gone to visit him in his ancestral castle, where you drive through 7 miles of oak trees Just like you read about In a novel and the maids and the housekeeper (In black silk) will line up In the hall (same novel) Them I have told It! Well, something else will happen for next time ™ No Change Necessary Dr. Price’s Delicious Flavorin Extracts have always been hon estly labeled; no change was nec essary since the enactment of the National Pure Food Law, either as to label or their manufacture. They have had for nearly half a century the patronage of the intel ligent housewives of this country. Flavoring Vanina «q . . ** Lflmon Extracts Lemon Orange Rose, etc GLENN-STONE. Special to The Georgian. Huntsville, Ala.. Aug. 24.—Miss Nina P. Glenn, a social belle of Hickman, Ky„ niece of Horace E. Garth, of this city, and A. Raultson Stone, a promi nent business man of Hickman, were married last night at the Garth summer home. Hotel Monte Sano. The bride has been here on a visit for several weeks. The ceremony was performed In the presence of a small party of rel atives by Rev. Francis Tappey, of the Presbyterian church. CAT CHEAT, AUGUST 24, 1VJT. A Most va-uablo Agent. Tho glycerine employed In Dr. I’lecre's «r>dlclne3 greatly enhances tho medicinal p-.-.pertles which it extracts irom native medicinal »ti and holds In solution much bettc :b*n alcohol would. It alto medicinal properties ol l*g own, .lom-ilcent. nutritive, log a valuable antiseptic and atrlifotdi'-J; FE8TIVAL AT “LE REVE.' The beautiful lawns of "Le Reve,' the handsome home of Mr. Rhodes, will be turned Into a veritable fairyland on next Friday afternoon and evening, for the beneAt of the organ fund of the new Christldn church. De lightful refreshments will be served, and a delightful time la promised to who attend. There will be diversions provided the babies, the tots, the lovers, maids and bachelors, and for married folks also. ' old 4 Suit of Black Taffeta to 5 o’clock. Many games were played. Delicious refreshments were served by Misses Iona Qloer, Helen Woolbrlght, Alva Barber and Ruth Whittle. Those present were Misses Pearl Roper, Ma Inna Pitt. Richard Lawrence, lueen Padgett, Ruby Steel, Ruby Bell lollla, Lola Headers, Mr. Cheater Gloer, Mr. James Gloer, Mlssea Helen Ashley, Ernestine Cason, Louise Bates, Myrtls Johnson. Ruth ilogun, Maude Steel, Elsie Davie, Mary Rogers, Susie HANDY PINS A lady can scarcely complete her toilet nowadays without a get or two of these pins for fastening her cuffs, holding her collar trim, or for use in some su'ch way. Come in and let us •how you our selection; you’ll be pleased with the assortment, the quality and the price. EUGENE V. HAYNES CO., Jeweler*. 37 Whitehall Street. Hagan’s Magnolia Balm, kBqatd preparation for (net, Mck,arms and hands. Mskrttbrskinlikcyon want it. Do<sittnan ■nL Not sticky or gressT. IVi hsrnlMi,clna,rdmhtu|. Can't be detected. L’seitn nnd Rif fct, femur,: k'mlL Sn»?k«Uifc. 1*ob Peacock. Helen Woolbrlght, Alva Bar ber and Ruth Whittle. MEETING POSTPONED. Owing to the game of baseball ar ranged as a beneAt for the Home for Old Women by the barbers and print- era, to be played on Wednesday, the 28th Inat., at Ponce DeLeon park, the regular meeting of the Gordon Circle of King’s Daughters will be postponed from this date until Thursday, the 2*th Inat., at 4 p. m. All active and associate members are their assistance (n making the occa sion a Ananrlal ■access. MRS. SARAH J. PURTELL, Leader. PSYCHOLOGICAL SOCIETY. The Atlanta Psychological Society, Robert Bryan Harrison president, will meet Sunday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock at 122 Peachtree ‘street The subject for discussion will be: “Mastery In Freedom." Tallis, limited to ten min utes. The musical feature will be of unusual Interest new voters having been secured. The pro|,-ram will In clude piano and vocal solve. ducts snd quartet numbers. Visitors are always welcome to this school tor haaith and happiness. Black taffeta Is a favorite material for summer suits, and very fash ionable (hla season. This design Is a particularly new one made In black taffeta The Jacket Is cut on strikingly new lines. The fronts cross In surplice style. The little sleeves are small capes In one with the coat. The bark Is perfectly plain, with flaring circular skirt falling from a soft crush belt rulsed a couple of Inches nlfove the waist line. The skirt Is cut In a gored pattern and has no trimming but a deep hem at the foot. The striking feature of this costume Is Its simplicity. The manner In which the coat Is cut gives It all Its style, for It has no trimming ex cept n piping of black :«tln nnd black silk crochet buttons nt the fasten- Ings,. WOMAN’S EXCHANGE. Ladles who expect to become mem bers of the proposed Woman's Ex change are requested to call at 120 West Peachtree street Tuesday, the 27th, and enroll their names. By so doing they will know more of the ways and means by which all may be bene- nted, and at the same time Insure the management of support needed to open September 7. Let all who are Interest, ed, and can, come, for we are anxious to open the Arst Saturday In Septem ber. i cream soon disappear. AN INFORMAL OCCASION. Saturday morning Miss Mildred Wool- lay entertained very Informally a few friends at bridge. Her guests Included only six or eight of her Intimate friends, and at the con clusion of the game a delicious lunch eon was served. X. J THE-.CUPjhZ j/OFQUALnrjY REFRESHING BA8EBALL GAME FOR OLD WOMAN'S HOME. Through the kindness of Mr. William A. Smith, manager of the Atlanta base ball club, the benAt game of baseball to be played on Wednesday, the 2Sth Instant, between the Union Barbers and Union Printers will take place at Ponce DeLeon park. The entire proceeds of the game will be given to the Home for Old Women, one of Atlanta's worthy charities. The game promises to be an Interest ing one, and a large arowd of faithful fans and supporters of the home will be on hand. Mr. Earle E Orlggs will manage the Printers, and Mr. R. T. Brown.tho Bar bers. The game will be called at 2:30 p. m. and tickets will be on sale at the box oAtce on day of game. Previous to tha; day they may be secured from the Un ion barber shops, from members of the Gordon Circle of Kings' Daughters, who have the management of the Home for| Old Women, and also front Mr. Wade P. Harding, president of the Atlanta ■ Typographical Union. When languid in the morning a cup of coffee refreshes. When tired nt noon a cup of coffee tones up the system. -When 'worn with the day’s work a cup of cof- v fee exhilarates. That is if the proper kind of coffee is used— MAXWELL HOUSE BLEND combines coffees thnt have all the necessary qualities to give pleas ure, tone and exhilara tion. Sealed cans at grocers. Maxwell ffouse Blend Coffee NASHVILLE—HOUSTON. CHEEK=NEAL COFFEE CO. Il odds greatly to tho efficacy of tho Black Cherry- bark, Blood root. Golden Seal root. Stems rot,; and Queen's root, contained in •Golden Medical DI«covcry*ln subduing chronic, or lingering coughs, bronchial throat and lung affections, (or all of which these agents are recommended by stand ard medical authorities. In all canes where there Is a wasting away of flesh, loss of appetite, with weak ttomadh, as In tho early stages of con- summlpn, there ctn be no doubt that gly cerine/acts as a valuable nutritive and aids the Golden Seal rooL Stone root, Quctf-’s rofit and Black Cherrybark la iromoUng digestion snd building up tha lesb aiMtsfrength. controlling the eougb and bringing about • healthy condition do system. Of course. It most •cted rework miracles. It will •nsumpllon except In its earlier — ana. ' S® stages. It win cum am ffYcrfi..obili- lig-ftn. chronic coiichs. bronchial d chronic r-~ VhM r>e n-vc ^Fn acute cough j effective: "ins In the lingering KTsbolsoelT hang-on coughs, or those of longstanding, even when accompanied by bleeding from longs, that It has performed Its most marvelous em _ gwood nett Med. Collcgo, Chicago, says of gly Prof! Finley EHIngwood, M. D., of Ben- WESLEYAN FEMALE COLLEGE, Macon, Georgia. ccrlne: * In dyspens!* It »«rvw an excellent purpose. Holding * fixed quantity of tbe peroxide of hydrogen In solution, it U one of the best ~ inuru — Fir i Matriculation Day, September 16th. Catalogue* Free. DuPont Querry, Pre*ldent tarrhal gastritis (catarrh*! inflammatl lebT. It of ca tion of heartb “•'hi >gastric (stomach) Iden Medical Discovery * enriches and eruptions, or ulcers. 8end to Dr. R. V. Fierce, of Buffalo. Tf, Y.. for free booklet telling ail about the native medicinal mot* composing this wonderful alcohol In It. medicine. Ti.cro '•> no c : . , LADiESI t Ladles' best I'lllow Hh.m Holders. : .: Great, up to date Invention. Pleaiie' i most particular housewives. Satlsfae- i : tlon — tlon guaranteed. 25c set, three setsi' •: 70c. Order today. Address j TBIO NOVELTY CO„ Atlanta, Ga. I. School Books and All Supplies Books and prices guaranteed. Closing Sale in Shoe department. Simpers and all Summer departmei SOUTHERN 60 Marietta St. oods. GOODS AND SHOE COMPANY, Opposite Postoffice. CASINO PONCE DELEON NEXT WEEK Matinees: Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, Second and Last Week of the Wills Musical Comedy Company —Presenting— ‘First Half of Week Last Half of Week “SWEET SIXTEEN.” “NIULDOON’S PICNIC.” CASINO Matinee Today Tonight WILLS MUSICAL COMEDY COMPANY Presenting “TWO OLD CRONIES'* STACEY-BLAKE. Miss Louise Stacey and Mr. Frank J. Blake were married Thursday at the Church of the Advent, at Nashville, at 7-o'clock, In the presence of a gathering of several hundred. It wns a beautiful midsummer wed ding. Rev. Bnzett-Jonee officiated, nnd the processional was led by the ushers, who were Dz IV. n. Will Professor A. a. Bowen, Messrs. Charles L. Ridley, Jr., and Miles P. O'Connor: then the brtdemalds, who entered In couples, al- ternated with the groomsmen In cou ples. Tho maids were Misses Mary Blake, Dimple Napier. Francis Beilis, of Memphis, and Bertha Coseetty. The groomsmen were Messrs. Robert and nughn Blake, James Bryan and Noll- ncr Stone. The bride’s sister, the mnld of honor, entered atone. In a beautiful gown- of Jeweled green chiffon over taffeta, and trimmed with a chiffon flower trimming of green with "a faint touch of pink. After the maid of honor the bride en tered with her father. Mr. J. Frank Stacey, who gave her away. Her gown wns of Almy white lace, made over chiffon and tnffetn In prlncesse fash ion. Her tulle veil wns caught to her hair with valley lilies nnd a chatelaine of these same (lowers wns suspended from the white-bound prayer book, which she held In her hnnd. Miss Sta. cey's only piece of Jewelry was n beau tiful enmen pin, which, belonged to her grandmother. The groom entered from the vestry with hts best man, Mr. Dan Blake, Ills brother. G pastime palace theater Matinees Dally 3-4 p. m. Nights 7:30-11. NEXT WEEK’S BILL LAMPERT & PIERCE, “Two Men In Black.” HOWARD HARRY, Eccentric Dancer. CARL & CARL, Musical Sketcb. MISS SADIE CARL, Illustrated Songs. St- Nicholas Auditorium PONCE DELEON PARK. TWICE TODAY. MISS FANNIE LEIOHT, at 5 p. in. and !).:?0 p. m. NEXT WEEK: RECKLESS REKLAW, with his marvelous riding on bicycles nnd nnicycles, nnd a race with n cham pion skater. WOMAN'S CROWNING GLORY Is her hair. If Gray or Bleached. ut-r u»ir. ii raj w niwuni. It can be restored to It* natural color without Injuring the health or scalp by one application of tha Imperial Htir Regenerator THF. STANDARD HAIR COL- OIUNO. It la absolutely harm* leas. Any shade produced. Col* or* durable. When applied can not be detected, tfamplu of your hair colored free. - , , , Imperial Chem. Mfg. Co.. 135 W. 23d St.. I. T me?xo^T f a ;rek W rmb?o‘d n e t r y ed’Z: ! 8 « ld Ph.rm.ev, Atlsnts. Go. Gate, with yokes of shirred net and j ■ — ' ■!' a ~~ l fp.,h?!-v ln Brcen T !milde > n <, haIr I ro,e * *nd the confections were in pink Vn. carrying* "out ?hTbri“vo h ri«e I Tta p.nk candle. In tall and 'rreen! whlch’hava••'wr’candle hofdere"were shaded with ^rivalled in all of her Dre-nuntlal ei?! whUe ‘ulle "hades. In the center of the prevailed in Jerpre nuptial^ tall|o wa , cake ln a dc ,lgn prevailed tertalnments. tulle veils. A benutlful musical program was rendered by Mrs. Bryan nt the piano, with n violin accompanist, and Mrs. Gillespie, who sang "Oh. Perfect Love." Through the ceremony Mrs. Bryan played "Simple Confession." After the church ceremony a recep tion followed at the home of the bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Stacey, Hayes street, to a limited number . friends and relatives. The house as decorated throughout with stands pink Aowers and pots of palms and ferns, with a color arrangement of pink and green. Mr. and Mrs. Blake stood with Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Stacey and the members of the bridal party the front drawing room to receive the guests. Mrs. Stacey wore a becoming gown pompadour ptnk-Aowered crepe, 1th a trimming of bands of green silk and white lace, worn with a green gtr- and sash ends. Her Aowers were ptnk roses. Mrs. D. B. Blake, the groom's mother, wore a reception gown black net In an elaborate design of sequins. The bride's table, at which the bri- of pink roses and green foliage, and had the pink and green ribbon rosettes from which to draw the trophies. The Individual- lees were Cupids and the cakes were pink roses. Mr. and Mrs. Blake left on the night train for Atlanta, where they wlU spend several days before going to Barnes- vllle, Ga., to remain three months. Mrs. Blake's going away gown was a stylish tailored suit of brown silk,' with touches of pink embroidery and white lace on the coat. The hat was a walking shar* of brown straw, trimmed with a Per sian band and coquet feathers. Jet i dal ma nshaw, of Covington, Ky_ nnd Mr. Jesse Corbett, were seated, made a pretty picture of decorative art in pink and green. The table was veiled In white tulle and framed around the edges with maiden hair ferns laid flat on Its surface. At the corners were Huffy bows of tulle. The place carda ere decorated with water-color pink CHILDREN >EETHINC Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup ver yfpTYYKAHS 7 MILLIONS i>? /OTHERS FOR 'VIIILB TEETHING Wl OgL ITKOOTiilWB| WINp.cql.lcv.nd U the BEST AeMED/ Li ' world- dregglats la every port of the Twenty-five Cents a Bottle. Guaranteed under the Pare Food snd Drug net. Juns 30, 190*. Serial aut»- her loot.