Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
i—MAGAZINE SECTION
SOCIETY TO ATTEND
GLEE CLUB CONCERT
THE Glee and Mandolin club of
the University of Georgia win
appear in ton, art at the Giand
opera house Tuesday evening. May 21,
under the auspice' of the Atlanta
Alumni association, of which Mi Rob
ert F. Maddox is president.
• The members of the club, selected by
Competitive tests from hOh students in
attandance. have just returned from a
successful tour of the state and a mu
sfral treat is promised.
AH-of the boxes have been reserved
for well known "Ger-gla' ni'n Th'
box holders are Governor Joseph M.
Brown. M Sin'"".
■BS: Mr. Robert F. Ma id- x. Mr
Clark Howeli. Jr. 83; Mt Harold
Hirsch. ‘i'l Mr. Preston S Arkwright,
*Sh. Mr. George M Brown. - 1 Mr
John W. Grant. 8«. Di. Phinizy < ■:
houn. ■tu’. Mr Thomas W I'onna L
*O4 Six of the nine judge: of th" mi
preme court and of th“ court f apt--.H i
are “Georgia" men and will «lt togem I
er in boxes Chancellor Raimi will be
In Governor Browns box ttflb ials ■ f
the university and tru ’e" from dlf
ferent points in Georgia will bo thf
guests of other box holders
The following ladles wijl be ask'd
to . act as patronesses Mc-gdamrs
Joseph M Brown John D. Little
Robert. F Maddox c I Tv-k
Clark Howell. .hr F E Pnughertv
B H Hill I’hfnuv Calhoun
Preston Arkwright .’ R Robinson
Reuben R Arnold Harold Hirsch
£ L Connalh Edwin Camp
E F Pomerov . Hart Hannan. Jr
Frank K Beland John S Spalding
Robert R Parker l.ogan William -n
Sam Jones W. I. Feel
E t' Martin Murton Hull
Richard B Russell Marner Martin
H H Cabaniss J Frank Meador
William H Fish A H Adair. Jr
Joel Hurt Perov H Adams
Marcus W Be-k Robert Le" ive>y
Burton Smith Robin tdair. Jr .
George M Brown Sam <’ Atkinson
E M Mitchell < H Blank '
John W Grant E R Black ,
Saunders McDaniel J F Boston
John M Slaton J. H. Boston, Jr.
—mrr i hi. - -nr - , . ' 11 1 ' ' 11 ' ' ' '
The Most Ideal Playground In America f
fjLJ TX V O Lake Toxaway, North Carolina iWY*' l y
LAM: ' - -a
- /jMraEik
// wW> ,wT/J
■ X wwHHMIWhWIIWwSV/ w w J
' .. wMwiIMkM m—mE iiBaBS ■ • lli.”r l;y M Hk lt
• w^iMrapwMMgi**Maurw /JU'F/ w\ /p *
<*• • x^^Bl', -
Hotel Reservations i
ft IP,, ~ ,n ’ v .—4 V.Mi U\\ \ >-S THE GEORGIAN TERRACE,
r or Toxaway Inn Booklets, Kates ana Reser- ~ ' }
nations please apply to the private office Georgian Atlanta.
Terrace, Atlanta; Hotel Hermitage, Nashville; . ' The Most Ideal Resort on the Maine Coast
Toxaway Inn, Lake Toxaway, or Holland House, PASSACONAWAY INN
NewY ° rk - Toxaway Inn Opens June 17th
Special Drawing-Room Sleeping Car Service for ‘ The Stop-Over--the]Warid-Famous
Atlantans ■ Lake Toxaway, in the Sapphire Mountains of North Carolina, HOLLAND HOUSE
Vo O «X 3 e e c^ n some years ago earned the sobriquet of “The Switzerland of 30th Street and Fifth Avenue, New York
L««ve Lake Toxaway at 7:20 P.' M.' . ’ , . In Nashville
Arr,ve Atlanta at 5:25 a. m. -fjqp mos t popular summer resorts in all America, and is equal THE HOTEL HERMITAGE,
F ° r Tra '" lnformat ' on Fr <> m Other Points Inquire at Local Railway . . , it- • ~ . .
in scenic beauty and climatic conditions to any in the world: It's New--Its Up-To-Date
,/ *. ,v„ w/A,** - -'’ Toxawav Inn, at the head of the Lake, two thousand feet above <
f sea level, has been leased by the Toxawav Inn Company for a %
( '.\ \ ! ‘y . ... , , ~ c z -..■■■*
X. /' V X b F period of fifteen years, and with improvements to the extent C y *V
' \ ]lj v of $75,000 will open for the season of 1912 on Monday, June A . '
n\\ J ® 17th. .b’b
( X A £ >' Jinu 1
? Among the improvements that have been made are golf links, a
\ twenty-mile boulevard around the lake: and in the building
/ * itself has been installed 40 new bathrooms, an electric.power
- —. /WIW
being constructed through the mountains so that Toxaway .
I nn can be reached from any direction in your motor. AjA.-
Amusements -,
Golf, Tennis, Bowling, Billiards, Pool, Boating, Fishing. Hunting, J \\
- Automobiling, Riding, Driving, Mountain Trails.
E A Brown E C Kontz
Arnold Brovtes James F Lewis
W TrnUftlvi's -. K Lipsconjb
J A Branch ' DC Lyle
Andrew <-alh<v.j:i Hofland Lowndes
~ ~ , william McCarthy
■; ;. - -=• 1 KJJ“
’•h ’• ' r !! ’hr <e C McMkhael
' har> . I < hrate ~, n< Maf ; r ., ...
t T f'ennis Winship Nunnally
J I Idcfcri .Jr .Alfred C Newell
E E t.v’igb'-rtv ,| G 1 glerbv, Jr.
r ;; i ,| |j p,-rlej
Walker Dun-, t w i Portei
i" j>. to duEtgnon Ren Z. Phillips
'' I- J’-r.sev e I' Richardson
F gi M Dorse v J B Ridle-
I '. IN-lli J F Ridlev
V D Ellis. .It l< 1, n.dlev, Jr
Jul'-n li'ld T w Rucker. .It.
F M Forts-m Ronald Ran.'-m
R L Foreman J<bn 1 Riley
■| F..inn R I elder •' J Simmons. Jr
I W < y.Jdsmlth Jr. Alex W Smith. Jr
j. i Gol,l->nith Hughes Spalding
H Grad' B '• Swanson. Jr.
Georg" n Gillen Burge's Smith
'A h it.ammi.nd Ttammell Scott
i ii.n M Slaton
...',. Al'-x W. Smith
T A Hammond v -, il)ra A s
" ' H.n V Sage
'.•. po ’. e '',. If, ’ r ' Vi< -or |. Smith
1 I, Ifodg on Robert G Stephens
", n'-V.? 1 '■ Stewir-
...vn 1' no,xir.it vibo.-t p Thorn'on
I v- H'‘!‘khv-'. Ir Ad...toil Thornton
N’brrf Hf'tAfij }{ w Tolbert
H uvp.v Johnson W'a’h'n?
L»» ksf’H Armint'j.w
L’ < •••nF, '.rorfir* P Whitman
\* .nhrift lune-: J' I Worsham
B H .itipps, Jr Hamlin n Yancey
Miss Knox Entertains.
?bn prr-ft\ events of *hp weok
wt th*- fUnnc? prirtv eiix>n b}
Knox Lk-t evening: qt home
nn Pic(lmrnt Miss Rob?, n
Vonn-: "f W;r hfn~ton, I). <the guest
<-f \i i \\ <' Hu’nphric war th®
rnmplinunicd 'jn*- t. and invited to
in* f-t lv a> i' Mi Margaret Haw
kin>. Mi: Pa. : i". May Ott’ey, Mr
i haiL U* iple. Jr. Mr Charles Mead
or Jr. _M’ Brn I’anie] and Mr. and
Mrs I itzhugb Knox.
THF ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: SATURDAY. MAY 11. 1912.
WHEN NEW HALF-CENT PIECES COME
Here Are Some of the Things That 'Would Probably Happen
v-‘ sT: Ji saf t ■
® X Cy.~' YTc iR-obrihi'
-> > N IS L > [TILLS U&s£
• " X& i?. N BAYS GOT
ifc\ ■ >- rr r- —/ XI’TS DRAW-
- /* rzA - \k RArfcA;' j
They Will Make Obsolete Old
Adages and Change Many
Ancient Custom s.
' Give 'i:- a bean's v orth of soup."
This -. ill be a frequent request at the
hasheries as soon as. congress mints
th' nev half-rent ple< e Also -
•'I leailv think a penny's worth of rib
bon would be too much. Give m» a
half-cent m»inure."
This is the wav th- ladies will talk at
the ribbon counter.
Just as sonn as -he new coin gets out
the American public will immediately
take it in charge and see what it can
do. If it will not do mu- h the aforesaid
public will probablv create new duties
for it The half penny or “bean." as it
'till be called by the populace, is to be
created in the interest of economy and
the woman who has a large purse to
fill.
The most destructive effect of the
wr: z a a---
u ''Ur
< > v'
XX >'''\ |s v ®**XtX
rSW --- ®
// pin ToV Tetri \| ~— \ WB
fl CrfvE ME S/kkE ftf X'Y/fUB
I I r>p -tcm RALF R|-
PENMIES? 17/
W
■ i TTf)
/ w
new coin will lie in its- ravages upon
several of our ancient and honorable
adages. No longer will th" father
counsel his son, "Take care of the pen
nies and rhe dollars will take i are of
themselves." Instead he will have to
say, 'Watch your beans, my son, and
they will soon be, ome 50-cent pieces."
It will further mean the .destruction of
that time-honored saying. "I don't care
a cent ” We will also soon begin to
hear of "bean-ante coker.”
Atlanta Guests at. Dance,
Th- Kappa Sigma dance In Athens
last night was attended by several At
lanta guests. A number of young men.
former students of the state university
and members of the Kappa Sigma fra
ternity. attended, and among the At
lanta girls there for the dance were
Miss Bertha Moore, Miss Jane Cooper
and Miss Eugenia Richardson, of Col
lege Park.
sth DISTRICT WOMEN’S
CLUBS MEET MAY 15
AN interesting event of the coming
week will be the meeting of the
second annua! convention of the
Federated Women's ('lube of the Fifth
district. The convention will be enter
tained by the Decatur Woman's club
Wednesday, May 15, and at 2 o'clock
the delegates, including 150 women, will
be entertained at luncheon by the De
catur Woman's club, of which Mrs.
Harvey Parry is president. At 5 o’clock
there will be a tea for the delegates at
Academy hall. Agnes Scott college, and
the social side of lhe convention will
be very pleasant. The executive board
Is composed of Mrs Arthur Gray Pow
ell. vfee president; Mrs. Howard Mc-
Call. recording secretary; Mrs. Samuel
Bowman, corresponding secretary; Mrs.
Harvie Jordan, treasurer.
The chairmen of departments of work
a re :
Mrs. Linton Hopkins, education; Mrs.
Orm<= Campbell, health; Mrs. H. G.
Hastings, punior civic leagues; Mrs. B.
M'. Martin, rural home and school
clubs: Mrs. Courtland Winn, civics;
Mrs. W. T. Roberts, arts and crafts;
Mrs. W. Frank Smith, library exten
sion Mrs Charles J. Haden, (tem
porary) home economics;
The program is as follows:
Morning Session.
Invocation—-Dr. W. P Smith.
Greetings Mrs. Harvey Parry, pres
ident of Decatur Woman's club.
Greetings—Hon. Charles D. McKin
ney. president of the Decatur Board of
Trade.
Response—Mrs. Dan Lyle, president
of College Park Woman's club.
Vocal Selections —Miss Porter.
Roll call.
Symposium on Social Hygiene-—Led
by Dr. Frances Bradley, state chair
man, followed by representatives from
the clubs of the district.
Reports of federated clubs.
Address. “Modern Women's Move-
ments''—Dr. F. H. Gaines, president of
Agnes Scott college
Afternoon Session.
Songs—Agnes Scott Glee club.
"Rural Sanitation" —Dr. A. G Fort,
state expert.
■ Rural School Conditions"—Professor
Richard H. Powell, state supervisor.
Reports.
1. Tallulah Falls School—Mrs. John
King Ottley.
2. Kindergarten—Mrs. Nellie Peters
Black.
3. Student Aid—Mrs. H. B. Wey.
General discussions and miscellane
ous business.
ATLANTA GIRLS
OUT OF TOWN.
Seveial of the popular members of
Atlanta's younger set a-" now enjoy
ing visits to various cities and are being
entertained by their friends Miss
Laura Ansley left Thursday for Suffolk
Va.. to visit Miss Virgina Jenkins, and
later she goes to New York tn visit
Mrs. George Harrison. Miss Mignon
M- Carty, who has been In Virginia for
several ths eu®st of Mr.- Harris
in Danville, goes to Orange. N. J., for a
visit to Miss Mildred Hazen before re
turning home. Miss Aurelia Speer,
after a visit tn Miss Hazen, is now
with her sister. Mrs William R. Hunt
ly. in Buffalo, N. s’. Miss Emily Win
ship left this week for Washington, D.
C„ to attend a house party entertained
by Miss Eliza Swary Swartzell. Be
fore returning Mss Winship will attend
her class reunion at Miss Somer's
school in Washington Miss Caroline
Muse has gone tn Washington to at
tend the <'hevy Chase reunion of for
mer pupils. Miss Louise Hawkins Is in
Mississippi for a stay of several weeks.
Miss Elizabeth Morgan left Thursday
for Lebanon, Tenn . where she is spend
ing a week with Miss Gladys Golladay.
who is delightfully known in Atlanta
through her visit last fall to Miss
Morgan.