Newspaper Page Text
Society
News of
Atlanta
*Today being “Tag day,” which is a
date set apart by Atlanta society for
work on behalf of the orphans at the
Home for the Friendless, few social
affairs were in order.
A number of Atlantans have gone to
Macon for reunion week and their, pres
ence will add to the social brilliancy of
the week. Miss Harriet Calhoun will
be the honor guest at a 6 o’clock tea
this afternoon in Macon, given by Mrs.
Louis Stevens, at her home on College
street. The honors of the occasion will
be shared by Miss Cora Mallory, of
Florida, who is the guest of Mrs. Henry
Wortham. Miss Calhoun is-in Macon
to be one of the queen's maids of honor.
Miss Mary Scandrett. who was elect
ed to this high social honor, is a mem
ber of the Phi Mu sorority, a fact which
will interest the many Phi Mu “girls”
in Atlanta. On Saturday afternoon
Miss Scandrett was tendered an after
noon tea by the Phi Mus of Wesleyan,
when the beautiful Phi Mu apartment,
which is richly furnished and adorned
with pink hangings, was decorated with
baskets of pink roses and pink carna
tions. Miss Agnes Jones, of Albany,
the guest of Miss Theodosia Willing
ham, leaves tomorrow to be one of the
queen’s maids also.
Wedding Reception Called Off.
The reception which was to have fol
lowed the wedding of Miss Mary Cooper
and Mr. Winship Nunnally on Thurs
day evening, at the home of the bride's
mother, Mrs. Hunter P. Cooper, will
not take place, the invitations being
recalled on account of the serious ill
ness of Miss Cooper.
Reception For Bode and Bridegroom.
Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Graves enter
tained at their home in Oakland City
recently with an evening party in hon
or of their son. Mr. A. Graves, and his
bride. Those present included the fol
lowing :
Miss Eilene McColloch, Miss Lillie .To-
Smith, Mrs. Stanley. .Miss Grace Al
mond. Miss Rebie T'pchurch, Miss Ruby
Farmer, Miss Winnie Nunn, Miss Vir
ginia Withers, Miss Marie Chapman,
Miss Leonora Whitaker, Miss Lucile
Ragsdale, Miss Eula Graves of Gaines
ville, Miss Annie Jay Graves, Miss Lil
lie Bomar, Miss La Hie Baird, Miss Zel
mar Jones, Miss Mary Dolvin, Miss Re
gina Lynch. Miss Anna Wooten. Miss
Bouncie Howard. Mrs. David Fricks
of Jacksonville. Mrs. A. B. Joy, Mrs.
Arnold, Miss Lee Tinsley. Miss Redone
Ragsdale, Miss Mildred Watson, Miss
Hester McMurray, Mr. E. M. Gordon,
Mr. J. D. Wooten, Mr. E. N. Pattillo,
Mr. H. fc. Lester, Mr. Williams, Mr
Loyd Bellamy, Mr. Ossau Cochran. Mr.
Morton Almond, Mr. Baldwin, Dr. B. S
Bomar, Mr. Connie Upchurch. Mr. Bry
ant Marchman, Mr. C. N. Ragsdale, Mr.
S. H. Beam, Jr., Mr. J. B. West, Mr.
Tad Bowdoin, Mr. E. Tyson. Mr. Mon
roe Martin. Mr. Otis Travis, Mr. and
Mrs. J. A. Howard, Mr. and Mrs. E. P.
Ryan, Mr. and Mrs. I. N. Ragsdale, Mr.
Peter Ryan, Mr. C. A. Beauchamp, Mr.
C. C. Greene, Mr. J. W. Wilson, Mr.
J. A. Wesley. Mr. Boken. Mr. 'William
Whitaker, Mr. Baird, Mr. Ernest
Thompson. Mr. Anderson and Mr.
Duggan.
Announcements to
Girls High School Alumnae.
The class chairmen are to meet to
morrow afternoon in the music room of
the school to make reports of their
work. If it is impossible for any mem
ber of this group to be present, she
is urged to send her report to the sec
retary, Miss Annie Barnwell, at the
English-Commercial High school, or to
the president. Mrs. Hartwell Spain,
Marlborough apartments, in time to be
read at the meeting.
It is of importance that all alumnae
pay the annual dues of $1 at once, as
the elections of the scholarship student
and of the teachers who are to have
the summer fellowships will be held on
Friday afternoon. Only members whose
dues are paid will have the privilege of
voting in these elections.
In case any member has no class
chairman or does not happen to have
been reached by the chairman, she will
confer a favor upon the. association and
its officers by sending at once her dues
to the treasurer, Miss Mattie Slaton,
at the Girls'High school; to Miss Ser
geant. or to either of the officers named
above. Receipt will be given at once.
The applicants for the Agnes. Scott
scholarship are the. following members
of the graduating class of the Girls
High school: Misses Laura Cooper,
BtmtoiWW
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Miss Clara Louise Kinkead, of Louisville, who is the sponsor for the Kentucky division at
the Confederate Veterans reunion, which is being held in the city of Macon this week.
Maggie Fields, Louise GateS, Lillian
Johnson. Hortense Moran and Magara
Waldron.
Voting for this scholarship will take
place on Friday afternoon at the full
meeting of the association, to he held
in the music room. All members in
good standing—that is, whose dues
have been paid—are entitled to vote.
Votes may be east by written proxy,
but none will be received by telephone.
Special attention is called to these nec
essary regulations.
Applications for the summer fellow
ships. offered to teachers in the public
schools who have been members of the
alumnae association for two years, will
be received not later than Thursday
noon, the day before the election.
The annual reunion will be held in
Browning hall on the afternoon of May
la from 5 to 7 o’clock. To this every
graduate of the school, whether a mem
ber of the association or not, is cordial
ly invited. There will be a short pro
gram and a general reception.
The cooking school which is being so
successfully conducted for the senior
classes of the school at present is open
in the afternoon at 3:30 o’clock to all
members of the alumnae association.
The outline for Tuesday's special
demonstration will be: Timbales,
.creamed chicken, bouillon; for Wednes
day, crown roast, creamed potatoes and
peas, lemon pie.
Miss Sergeant extends to the alumnae
members a hearty invitation to these
very valuable lectures and demonstra
tions. They are most interesting and
profitable and have already proven a
delight to the alumnae who have at
tended. The regular lessons are given
in the morning for the school girls and
these special demonstrations in the aft
ernoon for the pleasure and instruction
of the alumnae members. Al! whose
does are paid are eligible for attend
ance on the cooking school.
Unveiling Program.
The unveiling of the portrait of Mrs.
Jennie N. Byers, presented to the At
lanta chapter. D. A. R., by her son. Mr.
Anthony S. Byers, will take place at
the chapter house on Piedmont avenue,
opposite the Piedmont Driving dub, to
morrow afternoon at 4 o’clock. Short
talks will be made by Mrs. Harry
Jackson, Mrs. Frank Orme, mVs. W. I).
Fills, Mrs. Joseph Morgan, Mrs. I. Y.
Sage, Mrs. W. H. Yeandle, Mrs. Wil
liam Lawson Peel and Mrs. E. Mc-
Dowell Wolff. The American flag
which will veil the portrait will be
Now is the time to get rid of your
rheumatism. You can do it by applying
Chamberlain's Liniment and massag
ing the parts freely at each application.
For sale by all dealers
Matinees daily at 2:30
and 4 p. m. at the Bijou.
Admission 10c.
White City Bark Now Open
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: 3IONDAY, MAY 6. 1912.
drawn by Misses Sarah and Callie
Orme. Mrs. M. M. O'Brien will sing
"Bring Flowers," Mrs. Byers' favorite
hymn, and Wurm's orchestra will give
several patriotic selections. Mrs. By
ers, who was one of the most beloved
pioneer women of Atlanta, was at one
time regent of the Atlanta chapter,
and a most active and earnest member
of the organization. All D. A. R.’s are
cordially invited to be present. Mrs.
Sam D. Jones, regent, will preside over
the exercises
Hyperion Club Dance.
The Hyperion club of West End en
tertained delightfully at a dance in
their club rooms recently. Among those
DON’T PULL OUT
THE GRAY HAIRS
A Few Applications of a Simple
Remedy Will Bring Back
the Natural Color.
"Pull out one gray hair and a dozen
will take its place." is an old saying,
which is, to a great extent, true, if no
steps are taken to stop the cause. When
gray hail’s appear it is a sign that Na
ture needs assistance. It is Nature’s
call for help. Gray hair, dull, lifeless
hair, or hair that is falling out, is not
necessarily a sign of advancing ago, for
there are' thousands of elderly people
with perfect heads of hair without a
single streak of gray.
When gray hairs come, or when the
hair seems to be lifeless or dead, some
good, reliable hair-restoring treatment
should he resorted to at once. Special
ists say that one of th« best prepara
tions to use is the old-fashioned “sage
tea" which our grandparents used. The
best preparation of this kind is Wyeth's
Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy, a prep
aration of domestic sago and sulphur,
scientifically compounded with later
discovered hair tonics and stimulants,
the whole mixture being carefully- bal
anced and tested by experts.
Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur is clean
and wholesome and perfectly harmless.
It refreshes dry. parched hair, removes
dandruff and gradually restores faded
or gray hair to its natural color.
Don’t delay toother minute. Start
using Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur at
once and see what a. difference a few
days' treatment will make in your hair.
. This preparation Is offered to the
public at fifty cents a bottle, and is
recommended and sold by all druggists.
Pianos, Organs, Sheet
Music, Violins, Guitars.
Catalogue free on applica
tion.
CABLE PIANO CO,
84 North Broad-st.
present were Miss Carrie Parish. Miss
Mary Disbro, Miss Charisie McClain,
i* Tomorrow: Giant Fifteen-Cent C
5 Sale in Rich’s Economy Basement aBBW—
Another great day tomorrow in the Economy Basement. Ve re planned a mammoth Fifteen
« Cent Sale—one that in point of value-giving surpasses any of our previous events, and you know
P* what great bargains ruled on our 10c, 19c and 5c sales. The very things vou want da} in and day «C
out are offered in this sale tomorrow at from 10c to 25< belov true woitii it s the one big bat gain
Lw event on the sale calendar. Come tomorrow expecting even bigger and betlei bargains than }ou re iff
2J known in a year—we’ll not disappoint you.
Remember, prices are for tomorrow, Tuesday, the one da}' on!},'and }on must shop in person. No
55 telephone or mail orders filled.
2 cans of Old Dutch Cleanser for 15c. Pair of linen-finished Pillow Cases, 15c. "C
4! 4 large rolls of Toilet Paper for 15c. 4 bars Stollwerck’s M,lk Chocolate , 15c. g
-m „, . , r T , C P te 2 pairs Men s black Half Hose, loc.
> 7 big cakes of Toilet Soap for 15c. Children’s 39c Dresses, spring styles, 15c. jC
3* 25c Bleached Table Damask, 15c yd. JU
_ 2 yds. full standard Percales for 15c.
J* Half dozen Hemmed Table Napkins, 15c. , 2 full pound bars'Castile Soap, 15c.
Women’s 39c Mannish Shirts (dark colors), 15c. 2 pounds any 10c Candy for 15c. jZ
25c Mercerized Voiles, in all colors, 15c yd. Men’s 25c pure Silk 4-in-hand Ties, 15c. *7
Half dozen Individual Towels, all hemmed, Men’s all pure linen Collars, 5 for 15c.
3* 15c. Men’s hemstitched white Handkerchiefs, 5 for J*
■-J* 15c &C
25c Silk-Finished Persian Lawns, 45 in. wide, 15c. Women’s 25c fancy lawn Kimonos, 15c. «
25c sheer, Silk Finished India Linons, 15c yd. Women’s Corset Covers, 2 for 15c. 2r
Jz* 2 Turkish bath Towels, 18x36 in., for 15c.
Women’s 25c Cambric Drawers for 15c. 19c and 25c plain and fancy Ribbons, 15c yd.
25c fancy Flowers, for trimming Hats, 15c. <,
Red bordered Huck Towels, 2 for 15c. Women’s 25c Knit Union Suits for 15c. JjL.
2 yds. C. T. N. Curtain Swiss, 36 in. wide, 15c. Women’s Knit Vests, all sizes, 2 for 15c.
3 yds. American Shirting Prints for 15c. u t it •
•» 2 v<Z S . fonev figured SZZfioZZnes for 75e. H'omen S 25c pure S.Zfi /fose for/5c po<r. gj
29c Corset Cover Embroidery, 18 in. wide, loc.
2 yds. of Shrunk or Embroidery Cotton for 15c. 25c Cambric Floancings, new and pretty, 15c jC
25c all-linen Suiting, 36 in. wide, yard, 15c. yard.
yfc 2 1-2 yds. best Apron Ginghams for 15c. 4 cakes Stollwerck’s Milk Nut Chocolate,
2" 4 cakes Octagon Soap for 15c. 15c. JjG
I M. RICH & RROS CO. | j
Miss Mary Peabody, Miss Virginia
Stanard, Miss Ina Line, Miss Nell Pace,
Miss Theodosia Andrews, Miss Louisa
Floyd, Miss Edwina Harper, Miss
Frances Springer, Miss Margaret Bram
lett. Miss Annie Ray, Miss Pauline
Wurm, Miss Edna Monsalvatge, Miss
Mabe! Monsalvatge, Miss Winnie Wil
son. Mr. Paul Turner. Mr. Harrie An
drews. Mr. Will Franklin. Mr. Pope
Franklin, Mr. Milton Gathright, Mr. Joe
Teague. Mr. Dick Elkins. Mr. Carroll
Woisiger, Mr. Ed Henderson. Mr. Wal
ter Arnold, Mr. Leon Wilson. Mr. Otis
Barge, Mr. 8. H Baynes. Mr. L. R
Root, Mr. Cleburne Eberhart. Mr. Theo.
Bean. Mr. Edward Parish, Mr. Louis
Pierson. Mr. Gordon Freeman.
The chaperons were Mr and Mrs. W.
H. Spellings and Mrs. Andrews.
More June Weddings Announced.
Several engagements of special inter
est to their friends have been an
nounced, among these that of Miss Jen-
dVW WW VtfW w
M RICH & BROS. CO.| M. RICH A BROS. CO. |TL RICH & BROS. CO.
1 A Ten Cent Sale Tomorrow in Our g
ig Main Floor Wash finals Department g
Our White Goods and Wash Goods department, known far and Jk
. wide for its high-cdass wash fabrics, with a reputation for its wonderful
=?* stock of the most dependable White Goods. . . . This high class de
ezSj partment situated on the Main Floor. Left Aisle, will hold a veritable
2E carnival tomorrow— A Great Ten-Cent Sale. Wash Fabries worth lac
3? to 50c yard on sale Tuesday morning at 8 o'clock for 10c yard. Here
is the story:
Finest Imported Ginghams from Glasgow, Scotland, worth 50c yd.. AT
Embroidered Voiles in lovely plain shades; splendid values at Me
White Nainsook for Underwear; 36-inch width, always sold at 15c I ||| l||k
Beautiful Serpentine Crepes and other Kimono Crepes, worth 19c yd'J gS JjU
Imported Chambray,3l inches wide; a well-known fabric at 20c yd. || »|
EOB Sea Island Sheeting, Min. wide; a good, even quality, worth 15c yd. CT W|
2* White Madias Shirting, 36 in. wide; really beautiful goods at 19c yd. I ® JjA
*□3o White Linon and Sheer White Persian Lawns, regularly 20c yard I J||L
Rich's Minch Printed Irish Lawns; our well-known special at 18c j
Plain Colored Poplin in a number of colors and white; worth 25c yd. I YARD >
A® No Samples—no phone or Mail Orders—no goods returnable or
e-'®® exchanged. Just a (dean-up at a big loss to get rid of the goods.
| M. Rich & Bros. Co. 11
nie Lowry to Mr. Robert Evans War
wick, the wedding to be a June event.
Another is the engagement of Miss
Letitia Greene to Mr. George H. Gillen,
also to be a June wedding.
Council of Jewish Women.
At the annual meeting of the Coun
cil of Jewish Women, to be held in
the vestry of the temple this after
noon, at 3:30 o’clock, the election of
officers takes place.
Luncheon Invitations Recalled.
Mrs. Henry Bernard Scott has been
called to Huntsville, Ala., by the illness
of her brother and the luncheon which
she was to have given Saturday has
been indefinitely postponed.
St. Anthonys Lunch and Tea Room,
The lunch and tea room which has
been successfully conducted under the
auspices of St. Anthonys guild will con
tinue through this week. The lunch
room is under the supervision of Mrs.
W LJBridwell and her assistant in a
building on Walton street between
Peachtree and Broad. Delicious lunches
are served between the hours of 12:30
and 3:30 o'clock. A liberal patronage is
solicited.
Fascinating Hair for Women
It's Easy tn Have Natural Colored, Lux
uriant and Radiant Hair.
So many women have gray and faded
hair that makes them appear much older
than they really
are. Thev are not
—using HAY’S HAIR
ajggStßlk HEALTH.
If your hair is
?raj or faded; if
your hair is full of
ydandruff: if your
< scalp itches —get a
T ggffMKWy bottle of HAY’S
V HAIR HEALTH at
/ T Jacobs’ Pharmacy
< X today; use it regu-
X larly and you'll be
' surprised at the re-
sults
HAY'S HAIR HEALTH'is guaranteed
to give satisfaction or money back.
9